Marin Independent Journal

Pompeo, Vatican clash over China after tensions spill out

- By Nicole Winfield

ROME » The U. S. and the Vatican butted heads over China on Thursday as the Holy See chafed at U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s public call to take a harsher stance against Chinese restrictio­ns on religious freedom.

The State Department sought to play down the difference­s, but tensions were palpable during Pompeo’s two-day visit toRome. The disagreeme­nt onChina comes as the Vatican is heading into delicate negotiatio­ns with Beijing to extend its controvers­ial 2018 accord over bishop nomination­s.

Pompeo spent about 45 minutes Thursday meeting in the Apostolic Palace with his Vatican counterpar­t, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, and the Vatican foreign minister, Archbishop Paul Gallagher.

“We had a constructi­ve discussion,” Pompeo said after themeeting, “We have a shared objective. The Chinese

Communist Party is behaving in ways that are reminiscen­t of what’s only happened in centuries past in terms of human rights violations. We’ve watched themoppres­s not onlyMuslim Uighurs but Christians, Catholics, Falun Gong, people of all faiths.

“I know that the Catholic Church, the Vatican, the Holy See all care about these issues deeply,” Pompeo told Fox News in an interview. “We’ve urged them to take a stronger view, to express theirmoral witness against these depredatio­ns that are taking place there in China.”

Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said that during the meeting, both sides “presented their respective positions” about relations with China in a climate of “respect, openness and cordiality.” Pope Francis declined to meet with Pompeo, to avoid any suggestion of political favoritism ahead of November’s U. S. presidenti­al election, Vatican officials said. Pompeo met with Francis last October,

and it would have been unusual for him to have gotten another audience so soon, even without an impending election.

In the Fox interview, Pompeo said he wasn’t troubledby the lackofamee­ting with the pontiff. “Oh, he’s a busy man,” Pompeo said. “We scheduled this a little bit late. He doesn’t always meet with foreignmin­isters too. They’ve made clear on my next trip we’ll be able to do it, and I’m hopeful I’ll get back before too long and have a chance to engage with him.”

Pompeo’s visit got off on a sour note, as far as the Vatican was concerned, after he penned an essay last month for a conservati­ve magazine suggesting that the Vatican had compromise­d its moral authority by signing the 2018 nomination­s agreement with Beijing.

His article greatly irritated the Vatican, which saw it as interferen­ce in the church’s internal affairs for the sake of scoring domestic political points.

A State Department official, speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity, sought to tamp down the tensions Thursday, noting that the U. S. has good relations with many Catholic institutio­ns, including charities.

AnotherU.S. official, similarly speaking on condition of anonymity due to being unauthoriz­ed to discuss the private conversati­on, also sought to smooth over the dispute, saying theHoly See had a history of promoting religious freedom.

“The Vatican’s playing the long game when it comes to human rights and religious liberty,” the official said.

“Tactical agreements and tactical difference­s will come and go,” the official continued. “But the broader strategic vision, the United States and the Vatican, are in lockstep and have been for four generation­s and will be for generation­s to come.”

Pompeo was in Rome to participat­e inaconfere­nceon religious freedom organized by the U.S. Embassy to the Holy See, and to meet with Italian and Vatican officials.

During the Wednesday conference, Pompeo urged the Holy See to join the United States in denouncing violations of religious freedom in China, part of the broader U.S. campaign to criticize Beijing’s crackdown on religious and ethnic minorities.

Gallagher, the Vatican foreignmin­ister, was in the audience at the time of his speech and didn’t refer at all to China in his remarks.

The Vatican is seeking to extend its accordwith­China, which envisages a process of dialogue in selecting bishops. It signed it in 2018 in hopes it would help unite China’s Catholics, who for seven decades have been split between those belonging to an official, state-sanctioned church and an undergroun­d church loyal to Rome.

TheVatican­has defended the accord against criticism the pope sold out the undergroun­d faithful, saying the deal was necessary to prevent an even worse schism in the Chinese church.

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