The Kremlin was commenting after Biden on Thursday misspoke and
introduced Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy as "President
Putin", before quickly correcting himself. In another slip,
Biden mixed up the names of Kamala Harris, his vice-president,
and his election opponent Donald Trump.
"We noticed that the whole world paid attention to what
happened, and there can be no comment here (from us), but it is
clear that these were slips of the tongue," Kremlin spokesman
Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
"It is understandable that they probably received such a wide
resonance given the context of the internal political
discussions that we are now witnessing in the US, but
it's not our topic, it's an internal U.S. topic," he said.
Biden's stumbling performance in a debate with Trump last month
and subsequent further slips have spurred intense debate about
his mental fitness, at 81, to run for a second term, and led
some Democrats to call for him to stand aside.
Peskov said it was for U.S. voters, not Russia, to determine the
U.S. presidential candidates' prospects.
But he added that the Kremlin had taken note of what it called
disrespectful comments Biden had made about Putin.
He did not say what those comments were, but Biden referred to
Putin at the NATO summit as "a murderous madman."
"We continue to consider it absolutely unacceptable and
impermissible behaviour for a head of state to make such
disrespectful remarks about other heads of state. I am referring
to his remarks about President Putin," Peskov said.
"This is unacceptable to us, and we don't think it in any way
makes an American head of state look good. This is something
that we pay direct attention to and something that is absolutely
unacceptable to us."
The Kremlin has accused Biden in the past of making unseemly
comments about Putin. Biden assented in 2021 to a TV
interviewer's description of Putin as "a killer", and in
February this year called the Kremlin leader a "crazy SOB".
(Reporting by Dmitry Antonov Writing by Andrew Osborn and Mark
TrevelyanEditing by Andrew Osborn)
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