Hours after disturbing videos surfaced of uniformed police officers getting blindsided by people hurling water at them, NYPD brass told cops they should not “tolerate” such behavior — and outlined “enforcement options” available if the same thing happens to them, The Post has learned.

“[P]olice officers are not expected to tolerate conduct that may cause risk of injury to themselves or the public, interferes with performance of their duties, or tampers with or damages their uniform, equipment or other department property,” states the department-wide memo , which was sent out on Monday.

The footage posted to social media on Monday show cops in uniform getting soaked as young men in Harlem and Brooklyn hurl bucketfuls of water at them, in one case even hitting an officer with the bucket itself.

In such situations, the letter states, cops may charge the offenders with obstruction of governmental administration in the second degree, third-degree criminal tampering, second-degree harassment and disorderly conduct.

If the officer’s equipment is damaged to a certain extent, he or she may also attach the charge of criminal mischief, the memo states.

The letter also notes that charges, such as harassment and disorderly conduct, are not applicable in situations in which someone is spewing “offensive or derisive speech” at police, explaining that “[s]everal courts have found that police officers are expected [to] endure a higher level of offensive language than ordinary citizens.”