Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- Russia recalled its  ambassador to NATO for consultations Thursday, two days after NATO  member countries suspended cooperation with Russia over the Ukraine  crisis, Russian state media reported.
Col. Gen. Valery  Yevnevich will return to Moscow in light of NATO's actions, official  news agency ITAR-Tass said, citing Russian Deputy Defence Minister  Anatoly Antonov's remarks to journalists.
"The policy of  (deliberately) whipping up tensions is not our choice. Nonetheless, we  see no possibility to continue military cooperation with NATO in a  routine regime," Antonov is quoted as saying.
He accused NATO Secretary  General Anders Fogh Rasmussen of making "confrontational statements" at  the meeting of NATO foreign ministers early this week and questioned  NATO steps to bolster its presence in Eastern Europe.
Earlier, Russian Foreign  Minister Sergey Lavrov also said Moscow wanted answers from NATO  regarding activities in Eastern Europe after the Western military  alliance said it would step up defenses for its eastern members.
Russia's move to annex  the Crimea region from Ukraine last month has sparked the worst  East-West crisis since the Cold War and raised fears among its Eastern  European neighbors.
At their meeting, NATO  foreign ministers decided the alliance would draw up plans for  reinforcing NATO's defenses following Moscow's annexation of Ukraine's  Crimea region -- which the West deems illegal.
These would possibly  include measures such as sending NATO soldiers and equipment to allies  in Eastern Europe, holding more exercises and ensuring NATO's  rapid-reaction force could deploy more quickly, a NATO official said. It  could also include a possible review of NATO's military plans.
"We have posed these  questions to the North Atlantic Alliance. We are expecting not just any  answer but an answer fully respectful of the rules we have coordinated,"  Lavrov told a joint news briefing with his Kazakh counterpart.
Responding to criticism  from Kiev and the West over the presence of Russian troops along the  border with Ukraine, Lavrov said Russia had the right to move forces on  its territory and said they would return to their permanent bases after  completing military exercises.
"Russian troops in the  Rostov region will return to their bases after completing military  exercises," he said, referring to an area near the Ukrainian border.
NATO's military chief  warned Wednesday that Russian troops could begin moving on Ukraine  within 12 hours of being given an order. Gen. Philip Breedlove, NATO's  supreme allied commander Europe, also said that with 40,000 troops  massed near the border, Russia has all the components necessary to move  on Ukraine.
Report: Yanukovych implicated in killings
In Ukraine, a newly  released report said the killings of protesters in the Ukrainian capital  during anti-government demonstrations in February took place under the  order of ousted President Viktor Yanukovych.
The preliminary report  by the Ukrainian government implicated pro-Moscow Yanukovych in the  covert planning of a series of sniper attacks in Kiev, backed by Russia,  during the rallies that eventually led him to flee across the border.
Presenting the findings  at a news conference, Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said evidence  showed Yanukovych had directly ordered snipers to open fire on  protesters. Yanukovych, now in Russia, has denied personal  responsibility for the bloodshed.
Twelve members of the feared Berkut special security forces have been detained as part of the investigation, Prosecutor General Oleh Makhnytsky announced.
The inquiry looked into  the shootings on Instytutska Street in Kiev, where dozens were killed on  February 18-20. Around 100 people are now known to have died in Ukraine  since the unrest began in November following Yanukovych's last-minute  U-turn over a deal with the European Union in favor of closer ties with  Russia.
The new government in Kiev has since signed the political part of the association agreement with the EU.
The report also said  Russian Federal Security Service operatives had been involved in  planning operations against the protesters. Ukrainian  Security Service chief Valentyn Nalyvaychenko said the Russian agency  had sent "tons" of explosives and weapons by plane to Ukraine.
Moscow has claimed far-right protesters were behind the shootings in an effort to stir up anger against Yanukovych.
Gas price hike
Meanwhile, the head of  Russia's top natural gas producer, Gazprom, said it would further  increase the gas price for Ukraine to $485 per 1,000 cubic meters as of  April, ITAR-Tass quoted him as saying.
Gazprom Chief Executive  Alexei Miller said the price would increase during a meeting with  Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, who urged Ukraine to pay off its  gas debts.
The increase came two  days after Gazprom announced a 44% hike in the gas price for Ukraine,  starting April 1, to $385.50 per 1,000 cubic meters due to the unpaid  bills.
Ukraine also owes $2.2  billion in unpaid natural gas bills, Miller said during his meeting with  Medvedev, according to a statement issued by the Prime Minister's  office.
"Hopefully, in the near  future, Ukraine will start repaying its debts and will finance its  ongoing supplies; however, we see that the situation is not improving,  and is only getting worse," Miller is quoted as saying.
Europe and the United  States are working together to reduce Ukraine's reliance on Russian  energy by developing alternative sources of natural gas, U.S. Secretary  of State John Kerry said this week.
 
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