Russia to Stop Using Iranian Base for Syrian Attacks 'For Now,' Tehran Says
Iran voiced criticism earlier of Russia's decision to make its usage of a base in Iran public, saying 'operational cooperation' was temporary, limited to refueling.

REUTERS - Iran said on Monday that Russia has stopped using an Iranian air base for strikes in Syria, a week after Moscow announced that its fighter bombers had flown from a base in Iran to hit targets in Syria.
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"Russia has no base in Iran and is not stationed here. They did this (operation) and it is finished for now," Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi was quoted as saying by Tasnim news agency.
ANALYSIS: On Syria, Iran realizes: If you can't stop the Russians, join them
Long-range Russian Tupolev-22M3 bombers and Sukhoi-34 fighter bombers used Nojeh air base, near the city of Hamedan, in north-west Iran to launch the air strikes last week, in a move which underscored Moscow's increasingly close ties with Tehran.
But the deployment - the first time a foreign power has used an Iranian base since World War Two - triggered criticism from some Iranian parliamentarians who said it breached the Islamic Republic's constitution.
Iranian Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan dismissed that criticism on Sunday, but also chided Moscow for publicizing the move, describing it as showing off and a "betrayal of trust."
"We have not given any military base to the Russians and they are not here to stay," Dehghan was quoted as saying by the Fars news agency.
He said there has been "no written agreement" between the two countries and the "operational cooperation" was temporary and limited to refueling.