Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin sought to cool tensions at their first summit in Geneva on Wednesday, but the US President called his Russian counterpart's comparison of the arrests of Capitol rioters and the jailing of Kremlin critics as “ridiculous.”
The two leaders emerged in mostly positive moods after more than three hours of talks, including two hours alone with just the Russian foreign minister and US secretary of state.
"The conversation was absolutely constructive," Mr Putin told reporters, adding that they had agreed for their ambassadors to resume their posts in a gesture of diplomatic healing.
Mr Biden called the session, conducted at an elegant villa on the shores of Lake Geneva, "good, positive".
The US president, who was ending a diplomatic tour of Europe, said he and Mr Putin explored working together on a half dozen areas where the former superpower rivals have overlapping interests, including the Arctic, Iran and Syria.

Russian president Vladimir Putin, left, talks with U.S. President Joe Biden, right, during the U.S. - Russia summit in Geneva, Switzerland, 16 June, 2021. Source: Swiss Federal Office of Foreign Affairs
But Mr Biden took issue with comments made by Mr Putin at a press conference after the meeting that seemed to justify his crackdown on opposition figures by citing the need to avoid a situation like the storming of the US Capitol in January.
"That's a ridiculous comparison," Mr Biden said.
"It's one thing for literally criminals to break through a cordon, go into the Capitol, kill a police officer and be held accountable, than it is for people objecting, marching on the Capitol and saying you are not allowing me to speak freely."
While both leaders said no "threats" were issued during the talks, Mr Biden was emphatic about warning the Kremlin over any cyberattacks against what he said were 16 clearly defined areas of US critical infrastructure.
Those areas, which he did not make public, "should be off limits". Violations, Mr Biden warned, would lead to a US response in kind - "cyber".
To suggestions that the world could witness a repeat of the 20th century's Cold War - when Washington and Moscow spent decades in a nuclear standoff before the Soviet Union finally collapsed - Mr Biden said Mr Putin knows that modern Russia is too weak.
"I think that the last thing he wants now is a Cold War," Mr Biden said.
Diplomatic breakdown
Diplomatic relations between Moscow and Washington had all but broken down since Mr Biden took office in January.
After Mr Biden likened Mr Putin to a "killer", Russia in March took the rare step of recalling its ambassador Anatoly Antonov. The US envoy, John Sullivan, likewise returned to Washington.
But the summit immediately got off to a good start, with the two leaders shaking hands.
"We are trying to determine where we have a mutual interest, where we can cooperate; and where we don't, establish a predictable and rational way in which we disagree - two great powers," Mr Biden said in opening remarks.
At his press conference after the summit, Mr Putin signalled progress in a number of areas, including an agreement to "start consultations on cybersecurity".
But Mr Putin also issued withering rejections of criticism over his human rights record and allegations of harbouring cyber criminals.
He claimed instead that "the largest number of cyberattacks in the world are carried out from the US space".

Russian President Vladimir Putin holds a news conference after the US - Russia summit. Source: SPUTNIK POOL via AAP
Respect
The offer of a more understanding US-Russian relationship - if not necessarily a more friendly one - went a long way toward what Mr Putin is reportedly seeking: increased respect on the world stage.
Mr Biden's reference to the United States and Russia as "two great powers" was sure to please the Kremlin leader, who has dominated his country for two decades, infuriating the West with invasions of Ukraine and Georgia, and often brutal crushing of political dissent.
The choice of Geneva recalled the Cold War summit between US president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in the Swiss city in 1985.
The summit villa, encircled with barbed wire, was under intense security. Grey patrol boats cruised along the lakefront and heavily-armed, camouflaged troops stood guard at a nearby yacht marina.
But in contrast with 1985, tensions are less about strategic nuclear weapons and competing ideologies than what the Biden administration sees as an increasingly rogue regime.
Mr Putin came to the summit arguing that Moscow is simply challenging US hegemony - part of a bid to promote a so-called "multi-polar" world that has seen Russia draw close with the US's arguably even more powerful adversary China.

L-R: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, US President Joe Biden, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov at the summit. Source: KEYSTONE via AAP
In a pre-summit interview with NBC News, he scoffed at allegations that he had anything to do with cyberattacks or the near-fatal poisoning of Mr Navalny, one of his last remaining domestic opponents.
For Mr Biden, the summit ended an intensive first foreign trip as president. He arrived in Geneva after summits with NATO and the European Union in Brussels, and a G7 summit in Britain.
Unlike in 2018, when Mr Biden's predecessor Donald Trump met Mr Putin in Helsinki, there was no joint press conference at the end of the summit.