Russian President Vladimir Putin is traveling to Tehran, Tuesday, for meetings with Iranian and Turkish officials, the Kremlin said, after warnings from the United States that Iran could provide Russia with drones for its war against Ukraine.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin will attend a trilateral meeting with leaders from Iran and Turkey — the format of meetings for Syria-related talks.
While in Tehran, Putin is expected to have a separate meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Putin’s visit to Iran comes after the Biden administration said Russian officials have visited Iran’s Kashan Airfield on June 8 and July 15.
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White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the Biden administration had information that indicated the Iranian government was preparing to provide Russia with "up to several hundred UAVs, including weapons-capable UAVs on an expedited timeline."
UAVs are unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones.
"We assess an official Russian delegation recently received a showcase of Iranian attack-capable UAVs. We are releasing these images captured in June showing Iranian UAVs that the Russian government delegation saw that day," Sullivan said. "This suggests ongoing Russian interest in acquiring Iranian attack-capable UAVs."
Sullivan also said the U.S. understands that the visit in June was the first time a Russian delegation "has visited this airfield for such a showcase."
But Iran's Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian said in a phone call with his Ukrainian counterpart on Friday that the U.S. accusations about Iranian drones being acquired by Russia for war against Ukraine are "baseless."
"This sort of claims parallel with Biden’s visit to occupied Palestine, or Israel, are in direction of political intentions and purposes," Amirabdollahian said, according Iran’s Foreign Ministry's website. "We oppose any move that could lead to continuation and intensifying conflicts."
Iran has supplied UAVs to its Middle Eastern allies, and announced Friday its first naval drone-carrying division in the Indian Ocean.
Senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies Behnam Ben Taleblu warned Monday that a growing Russian-Iranian partnership could mean "trouble for Washington."
"Be it drone sales or sanctions busting, Washington needs to expose and sanction the connective nodes between Tehran and Moscow," Taleblu told Fox News.
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The U.S. broadened its network of sanctions earlier this month after Tehran attempted to skirt U.S.-sanctioned Iranian petroleum and petrochemical products by selling the banned items to East Asia.
"Although the leaders are reportedly meeting to discuss Syria under the Astana process, what is likely bringing Khamenei, Putin, and Erdogan together is their shared interest in regime survival and what the other autocrats can do to help with that," Taleblu said.
Meanwhile, State Department spokesman Ned Price said Monday that the Biden administration "will continue to watch very closely all of our sanctions remain in force."
"Any transaction of this sort would implicate a number of the sanctions that we have on the books and presumably a number of sanctions that countries around the world have on the books," Price said, regarding the drones. "So this is something that we'll continue to monitor."
Putin’s visit to Iran comes after President Biden visited Israel and Saudi Arabia. Biden, in Saudi Arabia over the weekend, discussed implementing missile and defense capabilities in the Middle East as a counter to Iranian drone and missile attacks.
Neither Saudi Arabia nor Israel have joined international efforts to punish Putin over his unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.
Fox News' Ben Evansky, Caitlin McFall and The Associated Press contributed to this report.