Citing an unidentified "senior official in Jerusalem", Israeli daily Haaretz reported that the diplomat was expelled two weeks ago and although Uruguayan officials briefed Israel on the move they made no public announcement.
"Investigations carried out by Uruguay's intelligence services after the discovery of the device yielded information pointing to a possible involvement of someone at the Iranian embassy," Haaretz's diplomatic correspondent wrote.
"The Uruguayan government turned to Iran's government for information and after consultations between the two, it was decided to expel one of the senior diplomats at Iran's embassy."
"I am aware of it but I have nothing to add," a spokesman told AFP.
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On January 8, Montevideo bomb squad officers detonated what turned out to be a fake bomb near the Israeli embassy, located in the World Trade Centre office complex in the city.
The convincing-looking fake -- complete with fuse, detonator and other elements found in a real bomb -- was detected some 70 metres from the building by bomb-sniffing dogs.
After destroying the device, bomb brigade Lieutenant Colonel Alfredo Larramendi told reporters that it "never posed any danger" but might have been part of a dress rehearsal for the real thing.
Israel has long accused Iran of sponsoring attacks against it around the world, using Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas as proxies.
"Iran and Hezbollah have a well-established terrorist infrastructure in South America, based on Shiite Lebanese migrants," Haaretz wrote.
In 2013, Argentine prosecutor Alberto Nisman accused Iran of opening secret intelligence stations in several South American countries to plan and conduct terror attacks.
Nisman was found dead in his apartment with a gunshot wound to the head last month on the eve of a congressional hearing at which he was expected to accuse President Cristina Kirchner of covering up Iranian involvement in a 1994 bombing at a Buenos Aires Jewish centre.