The Manila Times

Vatican tries to cool ire over Pope’s Kyiv remarks

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The Vatican’s secretary of state is seeking to defuse the outrage over Pope Francis’ latest diplomatic foray, insisting in media interviews that a primary condition for negotiatio­ns to end the war in Ukraine is an end to Russia’s aggression and that any peace must be a “just” one.

Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s top diplomat, made the rounds with friendly Italian media on Monday, the same day Ukraine summoned the Holy See’s ambassador to complain about Francis’ comments that Kyiv should have the “courage of the white flag” to negotiate an end to the war.

Francis’ remarks to Swiss broadcaste­r RSI, recorded in early February but only aired on Saturday, elicited immediate criticism from Ukraine and its allies, even after the Vatican press office tried to redirect attention to his other remarks in the interview that “negotiatio­n is never a surrender.”

The ruckus once again put the Vatican’s diplomatic corps in the position of having to smooth over the 87-year-old pontiff’s informal, off-the-cuff way of speaking, providing a more articulate­d position in line with the Holy See’s tradition of calibrated diplomatic neutrality.

In an interview with the leading Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera that was published on Tuesday, Parolin said that Francis, in another speech last month, had called for a diplomatic solution in Ukraine and the search for a just and lasting peace.

“In that sense, it’s obvious that the creation of such conditions aren’t just for one side, but both sides, and the first condition would be that of putting an end to the aggression,” Parolin said in comments that were also reported by the Vatican’s in-house Vatican News portal.

He also said Francis’ “white flag” comments were in response to a question that used the term, and that the pontiff subsequent­ly insisted that “negotiatio­n is never a surrender.”

The cardinal made similar comments to Italy’s state-run RAI, saying: “Peace in Ukraine will have to be a just peace. It means recognizin­g mutual rights, and also mutual duties, above all, taking into account the dignity of people.”

It’s not the first time Francis’ sometimes imprecise way of speaking, which is often appreciate­d in other contexts because of its simplicity, has created a diplomatic headache for the Holy See and angered one or the other side in the war.

He has repeatedly expressed solidarity with the “martyred” Ukrainian people but refused to call out Russia or President Vladimir Putin by name. He has seemingly expressed understand­ing for the invasion Putin ordered by saying the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on was “barking at Russia’s door” by expanding east, but then earned a formal protest from Moscow when he blamed most of the cruelty on Chechens and other minorities.

Last September, Francis again courted the displeasur­e of Ukrainians, including its Greek Catholic bishops, when he praised Russia’s imperial past during a meeting with Russian youths. After Ukrainians voiced their sense of betrayal, Francis later acknowledg­ed his words were “perhaps not happy” and that he in no way meant to justify Russia’s invasion.

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