VATICAN CITY ā In his most substantial critique of U.S., Russian and other military incursions in sovereign countries, Pope Leo XIV on Friday denounced how nations were using force to assert their dominion worldwide, ācompletely underminingā peace and the post-World War II international legal order.
āWar is back in vogue and a zeal for war is spreading,ā Leo told ambassadors from around the world who represent their countriesā interests at the Holy See.
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Leo didnāt name individual countries that have resorted to force in his lengthy speech, the bulk of which he delivered in English in a break from the Vaticanās traditional diplomatic protocol of Italian and French. But his speech came amid the backdrop of the recent U.S. military operation in Venezuela to remove NicolĆ”s Maduro from power, Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine and other conflicts.
The occasion was the popeās annual audience with the Vatican diplomatic corps, which traditionally amounts to his yearly foreign policy address.
In his first such encounter, historyās first U.S.-born pope delivered much more than the traditional roundup of global hotspots. In a speech that touched on threats to religious freedom and the Catholic Churchās opposition to abortion and surrogacy, Leo lamented how the United Nations and multilateralism as a whole were increasingly under threat.
āA diplomacy that promotes dialogue and seeks consensus among all parties is being replaced by a diplomacy based on force, by either individuals or groups of allies,ā he said. āThe principle established after the Second World War, which prohibited nations from using force to violate the borders of others, has been completely undermined.ā
āInstead, peace is sought through weapons as a condition for asserting oneās own dominion. This gravely threatens the rule of law, which is the foundation of all peaceful civil coexistence,ā he said.
A geopolitical roundup of conflicts and suffering
Leo did refer explicitly to tensions in Venezuela, calling for a peaceful political solution that keeps in mind the ācommon good of the peoples and not the defense of partisan interests.ā
The U.S. military seized Maduro, the Venezuelan leader, in a surprise nighttime raid. The Trump administration is now seeking to control Venezuelaās oil resources and its government. The U.S. government has insisted Maduro's capture was legal, saying drug cartels operating from Venezuela amounted to unlawful combatants and that the U.S. is now in an āarmed conflictā with them.
Analysts and some world leaders have condemned the Venezuela mission, warning that Maduroās ouster could pave the way for more military interventions and a further erosion of the global legal order.
On Ukraine, Leo repeated his appeal for an immediate ceasefire and urgently called for the international community ānot to waver in its commitment to pursuing just and lasting solutions that will protect the most vulnerable and restore hope to the afflicted peoples.ā
On Gaza, Leo repeated the Holy Seeās call for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and insisted on the Palestiniansā right to live in Gaza and the West Bank āin their own land.ā
Comments about abortion, surrogacy and discrimination
In other comments, Leo said the persecution of Christians around the world was āone of the most widespread human rights crises today,ā affecting one in seven Christians globally. He cited religiously motivated violence in Bangladesh, Nigeria, the Sahel, Mozambique and Syria but said religious discrimination was also present in Europe and the Americas.
There, Christians āare sometimes restricted in their ability to proclaim the truths of the Gospel for political or ideological reasons, especially when they defend the dignity of the weakest, the unborn, refugees and migrants, or promote the family.ā
Leo repeated the churchās opposition to abortion and euthanasia and expressed ādeep concernā about projects to provide cross-border access to mothers seeking abortion.
He also described surrogacy as a threat to life and dignity. āBy transforming gestation into a negotiable service, this violates the dignity both of the child, who is reduced to a product, and of the mother, exploiting her body and the generative process, and distorting the original relational calling of the family,ā he said.
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