Washington's claims about Iran becoming a "safe haven" for al-Qaeda are baseless, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Zamir Kabulov said in a statement on Wednesday.
"It seems that Mr Pompeo, at the end [of Donald Trump’s presidency], wants to do something else to hurt Iran. But this is absolutely unsubstantiated and unreasonable. There is absolutely no information”, Kabulov said when asked if Moscow had any info about Tehran's possible links to al-Qaeda.
The statement comes a day after Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif went on Twitter to berate the US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo over his allegations that Tehran develops ties with al-Qaeda.
Zarif called the allegations ostensibly based on intelligence data "fictitious", adding that Mr “we lie, cheat, steal" Pompeo, "is pathetically ending his disastrous career with more warmongering lies”.
The remarks folllowed Pompeo accusing Iran of actively supporting al-Qaeda, claiming that the Islamic Republic currently serves as a "home base" for the terrorist group and provides operatives with travel documents and logistical support.
Speaking at the National Press Club, the US secretary of state asserted that the allegedly tense ties between Tehran and al-Qaeda shifted in 2015, when the Iran nuclear deal, also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) was finalised.
"Everything changed in 2015 — the same year that the Obama administration and the 'E-3' — France, Germany, and Britain — were finalising the JCPOA", Pompeo claimed.
According to him, Iran moved at the time to allow the terrorist group to set up "new operational headquarters, on the condition that al-Qaeda operatives inside abide by the regime's rules governing al-Qaeda's stay inside the country”.
In the aftermath of the withdrawal, Washington reinstated crippling economic sanctions against Iran, in what prompted the Islamic Republic in May 2019 to announce that it had started scaling back its JCPOA obligations.
*al-Qaeda, a terrorist group banned in Russia and a number of other countries