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    Decoding US-Russian body language in Mexico

    LOS CABOS, Mexico (AP) — It's hard to tell if President Barack Obama got a sense of Russian President Vladimir Putin's soul. In front of reporters, they hardly looked at each other.

    In their first meeting since 2009, Obama and Putin shared little eye contact and did not appear to express much personal warmth following a two-hour meeting on the sidelines of the G20 summit. Putin made brief remarks and then looked down at the table as Obama spoke to reporters, aided by a translator.

    The gathering had a much different feel compared with President George W. Bush's first meeting with Putin in Slovenia in June 2001. Bush said then that he was "able to get a sense of his soul."

    Yet aides said the media shouldn't draw any conclusions from the chilly body language. They said the meeting wouldn't have lasted as long as it did if the two leaders didn't get along.

    Mike McFaul, the U.S. ambassador to Russia, said the chemistry between Obama and Putin was "very businesslike" and "cordial." McFaul added that there was nothing extraordinary about the exchange. "That's just the way he looks, that's just the way he acts," McFaul said of Putin.

    Said Ben Rhodes, Obama's deputy national security adviser: "This isn't the first body language-gate we've had with the Russians." Rhodes noted that the White House had faced similar questions before but said these were "businesslike conversations" between the two leaders and cautioned against trying to decode body language.

    Later, the two leaders were all smiles after Obama sat down for the start of the summit. With Putin seated to his right, Obama gave the Russian president a quick "thumbs up" and then slid his chair over to share a few words. Obama's face lit up with a big smile and Putin grinned as they separated and the meeting began.

    ___

    Obama and Putin both want to meet in each other's country — whether they will is anyone's guess.

    Putin ended his brief remarks before reporters with an invitation for Obama to visit Moscow. Obama, who faces voters in five months, made a similar offer.

    "I look forward to visiting Russia again, and I look forward to hosting you in the United States," Obama said.

    The U.S. president has already nixed plans to attend the APEC summit in Vladivostok, Russia, in September because of his re-election campaign.

    During a March national security summit in Seoul, South Korea, Obama accepted an invitation from outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev to visit St. Petersburg, Russia. Obama said he planned to make the trip after the 2012 campaign. But if he loses re-election, it's unclear if that meeting will take place.

    ___

    The G20 summit's main websites — www.g20.org and www.g20mexico.org — were down through much of Monday afternoon, apparent victims of hackers protesting the international economic conference.

    The hacker group Anonymous Hispano took credit for paralyzing the online sites. At around 3 p.m., Los Cabos time, Anonymous Hispano tweeted "Only minutes to begin (hash)OpG20." Minutes later, the group followed with another tweet about the G20, "they are responsible in great measure for the poverty of the world." A flurry of other tweets touting the site problems followed. Several Anonymous-related groups have paralyzed the websites of the Brazilian, Russian and other governments.

    Mexico's Foreign Relations Ministry, which runs the G20 site, declined comment on the matter.

    A blog entry signed by the group condemned what it said is the enormous expense of holding such summits.

    "We need changes in economic policy that benefit the majority in fields such as education, health and farm aid," the blog text reads.

    ____

    Associated Press writer Jack Chang contributed to this article.

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