Russia has called its ambassador to the US to come back home for consultations on the future of Moscow-Washington relations after US President Joe Biden called his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin “a killer”.
In a statement on Wednesday, the Russian Foreign Ministry said it had called its ambassador, Anatoly Antonov, to ensure bilateral ties did not degrade irreparably.
“The main thing for us is to determine the ways in which the difficult Russian-American relations that Washington has led into a dead-end in recent years could be rectified,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.
You can’t accuse President Joe Biden of holding back on what he truly thinks of Vladimir Putin. In pretty extraordinarily frank comments to ABC News, Biden described Putin as a “killer” devoid of a human soul. https://t.co/KDQYB6TBYi
— The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) March 17, 2021
“We are interested in preventing their irreversible degradation if the Americans recognize the risks involved.”
Tensions have been running high between the two countries in recent months, especially after a declassified report on Russia’s alleged attempts to interfere in the 2020 US election, a claim Russia called baseless, and the suspected poisoning of currently jailed opposition figure Alexey Navalny.
The report, released on Tuesday from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, accused Russia of interfering in the US presidential election with an expansive social media and online influence campaign, while “denigrating President Biden’s candidacy and the Democratic Party” and “supporting former President [Donald] Trump.”
“The new American administration has been in power for two months, and a symbolic 100-day anniversary is just round the corner, which is an appropriate milestone to try and assess what the Biden team is successful in, and what it’s not,” Zakharova said.
She said a pause would allow the Americans to acknowledge the associated risk of the declining relationship between the two countries, blaming Washington for sending the relationship into a stalemate in recent years.
Biden calls Putin ‘killer’
Meanwhile, in an interview with ABC on Tuesday, Biden was asked whether he thought the Russian president was a “killer”, to which he responded “I do”, and threatened some form of retaliation about Kremlin’s alleged interference in US affairs.
“The price he’s going to pay, you’ll see shortly,” Biden said.
Biden labeled Putin a "killer.” The president of the Russian lower house, responded: "Putin is our president, and an attack on him is an attack on our country." — Telegram
— The Election Wizard (@Wizard_Predicts) March 17, 2021
Trump was similarly prompted to call Putin a “killer” in 2017, after he said he respected the Russian leader. “But he’s a killer,” Fox News host Bill O’Reilly responded in an interview.
“There are a lot of killers,” Trump said. “You think our country’s so innocent?”
US State Department Deputy Spokesperson Jalina Porter was asked on Wednesday to say whether the Biden administration would recall its ambassador in Russia for consultations as well. “We have nothing to comment on that,” Porter said in response.
Early this month, the US and the European Union slapped a new round of sanctions against a number of Russian officials and companies over the Navalny issue.
In response, Moscow denounced the sanctions as the “triumph of absurdity over reason” and “an excuse to continue open interference in our internal affairs.”
This article has been adapted from its original source.