"I think it is a very alarming sign as NATO is getting closer to the Russian border. The fact that I am here today proves that I do not want confrontation and escalation of the situation," Turco said.
He added that diplomacy should be the only tool to solve the issues in the world.
NATO has been boosting its military presence in Europe, particularly in Eastern European states, since the outbreak of the Ukrainian crisis, citing Russia's alleged interference in that conflict, as well as Crimea's reunification with Russia, as justification for the move.
At the NATO summit in Warsaw on July 8, the Alliance's secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, said that the military bloc would strengthen its presence in Eastern Europe on a rotational basis with four battalions in Poland and in the Baltic nations.
On October 14-16, the 18-member delegation of Italian lawmakers and businesspeople are visiting Russia's peninsula of Crimea.