Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told state news agency RIA Novosti it had become “politically fashionable” to pin the blame for cyber attacks on Moscow.
Russia announced in August that it had registered the world’s first coronavirus vaccine, Sputnik V — named after the Soviet-era satellite — but did so ahead of large-scale clinical trials.
In October, President Vladimir Putin announced that Russia had also registered its second coronavirus vaccine, EpiVacCorona.
“We do not need anything other than a normal approach towards the projects we already have in Russia and are promoting including in cooperation with foreign partners,” Ryabkov said.
Ryabkov also claimed that Russian companies themselves were frequently becoming targets of foreign cyber attacks.
He said Russia and the United States should allow experts to look into the issue.
“However, Washington has persistently steered clear of such dialogue,” Ryabkov added.
Last week, Microsoft urged a crackdown on cyber attacks perpetrated by states and “malign actors” after a spate of hacks disrupted healthcare organisations fighting the coronavirus.
The US tech giant said the attacks came from Russia and North Korea.
The Kremlin has previously denied US claims that Russian military intelligence was behind cyber attacks targeting Ukraine’s power grid, the 2017 French election and the 2018 Winter Olympic Games, describing them as “Russophobia”.