An ex-Russian "spy" has admitted he attended a controversial meeting with Donald Trump's son in 2016.

Rinat Akhmetshin, named in US Senate documents as a former "Soviet counter-intelligence officer", confirmed he was present at the discussion Mr Trump Jr had with Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya.

He claimed the meeting was billed as part of a Russian government effort to help Mr Trump during last year's US presidential election campaign.

Image: Rinat Akhmetshin says the meeting was 'not substantive'

The lobbyist said Mr Trump Jr was disappointed when he asked for evidence of illicit money flowing to the rival Democratic National Committee and Ms Veselnitskaya could not provide it.

Mr Akhmetshin said the group's conversation was "not substantive" and he "actually expected more serious" discussion.


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Mr Trump Jr did not disclose Mr Akhmetshin's presence in statements and emails he released earlier this week about the meeting.

The correspondence showed Mr Trump Jr was told Russian figures wanted to meet to pass on negative information about Democrat Hilary Clinton.

Jared Kushner, Mr Trump's son-in-law and current White House senior adviser, and then-campaign chairman Paul Manafort also attended the discussion.

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The Russian government has denied any involvement in or knowledge of the June 2016 meeting.

Asked on Friday about Mr Akhmetshin, Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters: "We don't know anything about this person."

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Image: The two leaders recently met face to face for the first time

Ms Veselnitskaya said she was not working for Russian authorities, but she told The Wall Street Journal that she was meeting with Russian authorities regularly.

She said she shared information about a US-born fund manager who lobbied for passage of the Magnitsky Act with the Russian prosecutor generals office, including with Prosecutor General Yuri Chaika, a top official appointed by the Kremlin, the Journal said.

But Ms Veselnitskaya was described by a US businessman who will give testimony to a Senate committee against her as a "well-resourced player".

William Brodwer told Sky News: "She is paid by and works for a man named Denis Katsyv. Mr Katsyv was the governor of the Moscow region, which is the size of France.

Image: William Browder says Russia's denials are not credible

"He's currently the vice-president of Russian Railways, which is probably the second most important Russian government company after [energy firm] Gasprom.

"He is a senior member of the Putin regime. It's just not credible to say she's not connected to the government."

Mr Browder added that Mr Akhmetshin was effectively Ms Veselnitskaya's "guide through the political corridors of power in Washington".

"There is no such thing as being a former member of Russian intelligence," he said.

"I don't believe what the Russians say and given the changing stories from the US side it's hard to believe what they say as well."

Who is Rinat Akhmetshin?

Image: Rinat Akhmetshin, centre, is a naturalised US citizen

Details on Mr Akhmetshin's identity come mostly from a letter sent earlier this year from the US Senate's Judiciary Committee chairman to the head of Homeland Security.

It says the lobbyist is Russian-born, but moved to the US in the 1990s and became an American citizen in 2009.

Mr Akhmetshin is described as a former "Soviet counter-intelligence officer", who worked for the GRU - Russian foreign military intelligence.

The letter cites reports that he "specialises in 'active campaign measures', ie subversive political influence operations often involving disinformation and propaganda".

It says Mr Akhmetshin denied the allegations, despite his "admission to the press that he had been a Russian intelligence officer, in response to a different press inquiry".

Speaking after his presence at the 2016 meeting emerged, Mr Akhmetshin claimed he was drafted to serve in the Soviet Army from 1986 to 1988 but was not trained in any spy tradecraft.