Kremlin disagrees that attempted munity shakes position of Russian authorities (Part 2)

MOSCOW. June 27 (Interfax) - Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has disagreed with the opinion of certain analysts that the position of the Russian authorities and, personally, President Vladimir Putin has been shaken by the attempted mutiny.

"We disagree. There is a lot of highly emotional hysterics among specialists, non-specialists, political analysts and pseudo political analysts. It seeps from certain hysterical new media outlets, the Internet, and so on," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Tuesday.

"This has nothing to do with the reality," he said.

Peskov described such judgments as "idle talk." "The level of consolidation of society, - as the president pointed out yesterday - of political parties, the military, soldiers, civil and religious leaders, believers and others around the president is very high," he said.

"These events have demonstrated how much society is consolidated around the president," Peskov said.

Events involving Wagner Group, defined by Russian law enforcement agencies as attempted mutiny, took place in Russia on June 23-24.