LONDON — Europe's security ''is on a knife-edge'' and President-elect Donald Trump is right to say NATO member nations must increase military spending, Britain's top diplomat said Thursday.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy said that ''the post-Cold War peace is well and truly over.''
''Donald Trump and JD Vance are simply right when they say that Europe needs to do more to defend its own continent. It's myopia to pretend otherwise with Russia on the march,'' Lammy said during a speech in London setting out the center-left Labour government's approach to foreign policy, which he termed ''progressive realism.''
Lammy said people often ask him when world affairs will get back to normal, and "my answer is that they will not. Europe's future security is on a knife edge.''
Trump has for years expressed skepticism about NATO, openly questioning the value of the alliance that has defined American foreign policy for decades and threatening not to defend members that fail to meet defense-spending goals.
This week Trump said NATO countries should spend at least 5% of their GDPs on defense, up from the current 2% target. He also said he would not rule out the use of military force to seize control of Greenland, an autonomous territory of NATO member Denmark.
Britain spends 2.3% of GDP on defense and says it will increase it to 2.5%.
Lammy said that while Trump's unpredictability and ''intensity of rhetoric'' were part of his signature style, ''we can be guided not entirely by the rhetoric and the language, but by (his) actions as president.''