Russia downplays reports CIA spy inside Kremlin

The Kremlin Palace.
The Kremlin Palace. Photo credit: Getty.

The Kremlin has played down reports of a CIA spy inside Russia's presidential administration, saying an official identified as the likely US mole did not have access to President Vladimir Putin.

CNN reported on Monday that the US had successfully extracted one of its highest-level covert sources inside Russia in 2017.

Two sources familiar with US monitoring of Russian activities confirmed to Reuters that such a CIA informant did exist inside the Russian government and had been extracted and brought to the United States.

The sources indicated that US officials were seriously concerned that Kremlin officials had made public what they claimed was the individual's name.

Russian daily newspaper Kommersant said on Tuesday the official may have been a man called Oleg Smolenkov, who is reported to have disappeared with his wife, Antonina, and three children while on holiday in Montenegro in June 2017.

Asked about the matter, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Smolenkov had worked in the Russian presidential administration but had been fired in 2016-17.

"It is true that Smolenkov worked in the presidential administration, but he was fired several years ago. His job was not at a senior official level," Peskov said.

Smolenkov did not have direct access to Putin, Peskov added, declining with a laugh to confirm whether he had been a US agent or not.

"I can't confirm that ... I don't know whether he was an agent. I can only confirm that there was such a person in the presidential administration, who was later sacked.

"All this US media speculation about who urgently extracted who and saved who from who and so on - this is more the genre of pulp fiction, crime reading, so let's leave it up to them," Peskov said.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said separately on Tuesday he had never heard of Smolenkov.

"I have never seen this man, have never met him, and have never monitored his career or movements," Lavrov said.

CNN reported on Monday that the US decision to extract its informant had occurred soon after a May 2017 meeting in the Oval Office in which US President Donald Trump had discussed highly classified intelligence with Lavrov.

Lavrov said on Tuesday that nobody had divulged any secrets to him at the meeting with Trump.

A US government source also insisted that Trump did not disclose secrets, such as the informant's existence or identity, at any meeting with Russian officials.

Reuters