Former Trump campaign foreign policy adviser Carter Page filed a defamation lawsuit against Yahoo and the Huffington Post on Thursday over a story that said he was under investigation for meeting Russian officials who meddled in the election.

In the Manhattan Federal Court suit, filed by Page himself, he charges that on Sept. 23, 2016 Yahoo “published a highly misleading article filled with false allegations.”

The article, headlined, “US intel officials probe ties between Trump adviser and Kremlin,” said that the officials were trying to determine if Page had private communications with senior Russian officials about possibly lifting economic sanctions if Trump became president.

The feds wanted to know if Page — founder of the investment and consulting firm Global Energy Capital — had met with Rosneft Oil Company CEO Igor Sachin, a Putin crony, and Igor Diveykin, a former Russian security official.

Intelligence officials believe that the pair were deeply involved in Russia’s interference in the election.

Page, who does business in Moscow, said his Russia trips were unrelated to his volunteer position advising Trump on foreign affairs, and that he never met with the two Russian men.

Page charged that Yahoo knew the information was wrong but published it anyway.

“They printed the allegations including those portions that falsely accused Dr. Page of participating in an alleged conspiracy to commit crimes against the U.S. Democratic Party’s Leadership, not to mention a conspiracy to undermine American democracy and the 2016 U.S. election,” the suit states.

Page said the Yahoo article — written by veteran Beltway journalist Michael Isikoff — was based on dirt “marketed by the Clinton Campaign” and that he has received death threats since it was published.

The Huffington Post’s website was also named as a defendant because it ran a similar story several days later based on the Yahoo report.

The FBI has questioned him numerous times this year, and he has been one of the subjects of the feds Russia probe even before Robert Mueller was appointed special counsel to oversee it.

He has faced allegations that he worked as an agent of a foreign government or colluded with one.

The suit, which names Oath Inc., the parent company of Yahoo and HuffPost, as a defendant, seeks more than $75,000 in damages.