The American newspaper The Hill writes about this.

The White House's communications strategy has now become "haphazard at best" and practically "inept," journalists say. The publication calls it inexplicable that the president's aides thought it was a good idea to brush off an interview before one of the most watched television events of the year and then recommend that he speak at a hastily scheduled news conference.

The consequences of such mistakes are great, the authors are sure: they damage not only Biden’s election campaign, but the reputation of America itself.

During a press conference on February 9, Biden tried to refute the idea that he is “old and absent-minded,” but instead he confirmed these fears, Der Spiegel magazine wrote.

“My memory is fine. My memory... Look what I have achieved since I became president,” the US leader said during a briefing, but just a few minutes later he made a slip, confusing Egyptian President el-Sisi with Mexican leader Lopez Obrador.