Trump’s son says ‘happy’ to work with Senate intelligence panel on Russia

Donald Trump Jr. arrives on Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, on April 16, 2017. PHOTO: NYTIMES

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - US President Donald Trump's eldest son on Monday (July 10) offered to talk to a Senate committee investigating alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, after he acknowledged meeting a Russian lawyer during the campaign.

"Happy to work with the committee to pass on what I know," Donald Trump Jr. wrote on Twitter.

Trump Jr., as well as two other close associates of Trump, met with the lawyer, Natalia Veselnitskaya, in June 2016 at Trump Tower in New York.

The younger Trump has said he agreed to meet the lawyer, who the New York Times described as having links to the Kremlin, after being promised damaging information about Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and Trump's then-campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, also attended the meeting, the Times said. It described the encounter as the first confirmed private meeting between members of Donald Trump's inner circle and a Russian national.

Congressional committees and a special counsel, Robert Mueller, are investigating whether Russia interfered in the election and colluded with the Trump campaign. Moscow denies the allegations, and Trump says there was no collusion.

Earlier on Monday, a Republican member of the US Senate Intelligence Committee called on Donald Trump Jr. to testify to the panel.

"Our intelligence committee needs to interview him and others who attended the meeting," Senator Susan Collins told reporters at the US Capitol.

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Aides to leaders of the Senate and House intelligence committees declined to comment about whether Donald Trump Jr. would be called to testify. Allegations of the Trump campaign's ties to Russia have cast a shadow over the Republican president's first months in office.

White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said on Monday there was nothing inappropriate about the meeting with lawyer Veselnitskaya. In Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Monday the Kremlin did not know the identity of the Russian lawyer.

"No, we don't know who it is and, certainly, we cannot track down all movements of all Russian lawyers both within Russia and abroad," Peskov said. A publicist who arranged the meeting with the lawyer last year said he did so at the request of singer and businessman Emin Agalarov, a Moscow-based client of his.

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