Biden says he raised many issues with Putin, but did not claim he changed his behavior
Biden said he raised with Putin -- and will continue to raise -- cases like jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny, the two "wrongfully" imprisoned Marine veterans, Paul Whlean and Trevor Reed, and the ability of Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty to operate, for starters.
However, he did not claim he caused Putin to change his behavior on those matters, signaling he thought the face-to-face meeting in itself a success.
"There were no threats, just simple assertions made. And no, 'Well, if you do that then we'll do this' with anything I said. It was just letting him know where I stood, what I thought we could accomplish together, and what, in fact, if there were violations of American sovereignty, what would we do," Biden said of the meeting.
On cyberattacks, Biden said they agreed to task expert in both countries "to work on specific understandings about what's off-limits and to follow-up on specific cases that originate in other countries." Putin refuses to say Russian hackers are to blame for some of the recent cyberattacks, despite U.S. intelligence indicating otherwise.
On the Middle East, Biden said Putin raised the withdrawal of U.S. troops in Afghanistan. He also said they agreed it's in the interests of both nations not to let Iran acquire nuclear weapons.