Russia Tuesday accused the United States and NATO of staging "unprecedented" military activity near its borders.
In a telephone conversation with his US counterpart, Chuck Hagel, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said the Western military activity had been growing substantially, and was "accompanied by provocative statements", Xinhua reported citing the Russian defence ministry.
Shoigu's remarks came after NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said earlier April 15 that the bloc had decided to take "further military measures" to respond to the crisis in Ukraine.
Rasmussen said the alliance's aircraft would fly more sorties over the Baltic region, and ships would be deployed to the Baltic Sea, the eastern Mediterranean and elsewhere.
Shoigu denied allegations that Russian special troops had been infiltrating into the Ukrainian territory.
"Anti-Russian hysteria that was recently unleashed in the Western media would not help subdue these emotions," Shoigu said.
He also said two fly-bys of Russian jet fighters around a US warship and a warplane in April had been "misinterpreted" by the West.
A Russian SU-24 fighter jet flew over the US destroyer Donald Cook 12 times in the Black Sea on April 12. A SU-27 approached a US RC-135 plane over Okhotsk Sea on April 22.
Also Tuesday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said the new package of US sanctions levied against Russia will negatively affect the country's high-tech industry.
On Monday, the White House announced fresh sanctions against Russia targeting seven government officials and 17 companies.
Ryabkov said Moscow does not want to sever ties with the United States and the European Union.
"We want to cut nothing, as we have got lots of ties -- human and economical," Ryabkov said.
Last week, Standard & Poor's rating agency downgraded Russia's long-term rating as well as ratings of a number of Russian companies amid the wave of sanctions imposed against Moscow by the West.
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