'We'll talk to the White House and tell them to fix that': Putin is exploiting Trump's 'credibility deficit'
Trump Putin
Trump Putin

(Russian President Vladimir Putin's meeting with US President Donald Trump was only supposed to last 30 minutes.AP)

As President Donald Trump finished his two-hour meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, Moscow was already declaring the bilateral sit-down a victory for Russia and preparing to tell the press that Trump had accepted Putin's assurances that he did not interfere in the 2016 election.

Russian media began celebrating the meeting before it even ended. Anchors remarked on its length, deciding a two-hour meeting meant that Putin must be Trump's favorite world leader, as tabloids declared it "historic."

A Russian body language expert told Russia's Komsomolskaya Pravda that Putin "controlled the situation and decided its tone," and called the meeting "a psychological victory for the Russian president." Another tabloid said the lengthy meeting showed Trump had become a "pragmatist."

Emerging from the meeting, which he observed along with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told reporters in an on-camera press briefing that Trump "said he's heard Putin's very clear statements that this is not true and that the Russian government didn't interfere in the elections and that he accepts these statements. That's all."

The White House was effectively forced to play catch-up, issuing anonymous statements to dispute Lavrov's characterization of the talks. "Not accurate," one official told NBC.

By the time the Trump administration began pushing back, however, Lavrov's comments had ignited a social media firestorm, and were widely accepted given Trump's well-documented reluctance to accept the US intelligence community's assessment that Putin tried to help him win the presidency.

"I'm inclined to trust Lavrov, who maintains that Trump accepted Putin's denials that the Russian government was involved," said Mark Kramer, the program director for the Project on Cold War Studies at Harvard's Davis Center for Eurasian Affairs.

'If, as I suspect, that is what happened, it was a key victory for Putin," Kramer said. "It shows him that he really does have a sympathetic friend in the the White House."

Ian Bremmer, president of the political risk firm Eurasia Group, agreed that Trump is "far closer to accepting Putin's 'assurances' that Russia didn't hack the election than others in his administration, not to mention Congress and the mainstream media."

"I'm not surprised he didn't make a big deal about it," Bremmer said. After all, in Trump's mind, to seriously take it up would be to delegitimize the validity of his own election win."