Lord Cameron has ruled out Western troops being sent into Ukraine to avoid giving Russian President Vladimir Putin "a target".
The foreign secretary acknowledged that the "war will be lost if the allies don't step up" on the BBC's Ukrainecast podcast.
But asked whether Western nations should send troops into Ukraine, Lord Cameron replied "no".
He added Nato must be in the "best possible shape" by the US elections.
Lord Cameron was speaking at a two-day North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) summit of 32 foreign ministers in Brussels.
Nato boss Jens Stoltenberg has floated plans for a 100 billion euro
(£86bn), five-year package of military aid to Ukraine, with the aim of
finalising a package in time for the next summit in Washington in July.
One
diplomat, quoted by the Reuters news agency, suggested the package
"goes some way to protecting in case of Trump. But it is impossible to
create something Trump-proof".
Lord
Cameron said he'd be making his second visit to the United States since
becoming foreign secretary next week and would be urging Congress to
give more financial support, which "could change the narrative" in
Ukraine.
Nato
would have to work with whoever wins this year's US election, he said,
so now was the time to get into "the best possible shape by November" -
alluding to complaints from candidate Mr Trump.
He
told Ukrainecast: "If we can get that money out of the US Congress, if
we can get Ukraine the arms they need, if we can show Putin that he
can't outwait us and that Ukraine is going to fight back and win back
more of its territory.
"If
we can do all those things, whoever gets in in November, we'll look at
the situation in Ukraine and... look at more and more Nato members
spending 2% of their GDP on defence and say, this is a success story. I
want to invest in this success.
"So
turn Ukraine in the situation and Nato into the strongest possible
alliance with the strongest possible prospect of success. And whoever
wins in November 2024 would inherit a better situation."
The
UK is a founding member of Nato, formed 75 years ago by countries
including the US, Canada and France in order to block expansion by the
Soviet Union - a group of communist states which included Russia.
Long-range missiles
Some
Nato members have sent weapons to Ukraine, with the UK, US, Germany and
Turkey providing anti-tank weapons, missile defence systems, artillery
guns, tanks and military drones.
The US and UK have also supplied long-range missiles.
Asked
about fears the war could still spill over the Ukrainian border,
particularly in Poland and the Baltics, Lord Cameron gave assurances
that Nato would intervene in those circumstances, under the
organisation's Article 5 pledge that "an attack on one is an attack on
all".
But he ruled out Western "boots on the ground" in Ukraine itself, saying: "We don't want to give Putin a target like that."
The
former prime minister said the UK would use the "architecture of Nato"
to deliver support to Ukraine but drew a distinction between a Nato
mission "for Ukraine" as opposed to "in Ukraine".
He
added: "I think it's not escalatory to say we're going to help this
independent, sovereign country to fight off an aggressor and we're going
to give it all the help we can in order to do that."
Britain
has given Ukraine more than £7bn and trained more than 60,000 Ukrainian
soldiers, in a programme started under Mr Cameron's tenure as PM.
But the foreign secretary urged other countries backing Ukraine to also step up, perhaps by donating weapons.
"Some
weapons have an expiration date," he said. "Much better to give those
to Ukraine and they can use them than have to decommission them at home
that actually costs you money."
Ukrainecast
host Lucy Hockings tried to ask the foreign secretary about his views
on the Israel-Gaza conflict but he declined to comment, saying he wanted
to focus on Ukraine.
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