San Francisco Chronicle

Pope promotes disarmamen­t of nuclear weapons

- By Nicole Winfield Nicole Winfield is an Associated Press writer.

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis is seeking to defuse rising nuclear tensions on the Korean peninsula and to boost support for disarmamen­t with a Vatican conference that will bring together 11 Nobel Peace Prize winners, United Nations and NATO officials, and representa­tives from a handful of countries with the bomb.

For some analysts, Francis’ address at the gathering Friday will provide a welcome break in the heated war of words between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as Trump continues his first trip to Asia as president.

The Vatican hopes the conference will do more by further discrediti­ng the Cold War-era idea that atomic weapons serve a purpose for deterrence and global security.

“For some people, it’s pie in the sky,” conference organizer and top papal adviser Monsignor Silvano Tomasi said. “But at this time, I think it’s very important to alert public opinion that the presence in the world of thousands of atomic bombs doesn’t guarantee the security of anyone.”

The conference is the first major internatio­nal gathering since 122 countries approved a new U.N. treaty in July calling for the complete eliminatio­n of nuclear weapons. However, none of the nuclear powers and no NATO members signed on. They argued the treaty’s lofty ideals were unrealisti­c given the rapid expansion of North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.

The treaty received a boost from the Nobel committee when it awarded the peace prize this year to the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, an advocacy group that was instrument­al in getting the pact approved. ICAN’s executive director, Beatrice Fihn, is one of the Nobel laureates who will address the Vatican conference.

The Holy See has consistent­ly opposed nuclear weapons and supported nonprolife­ration and disarmamen­t efforts, and history’s first Latin American pope has strongly backed that line. But Francis brings to the table arguments based on his other papal priorities: that atomic weapons are a threat to the environmen­t, that the costs of developing them could be put to far better use, and that the world would be a far safer place if dialogue prevailed over confrontat­ion.

Monsignor Tomasi said the Vatican hopes to send both Washington and Pyongyang a clear message through the conference: that the only way forward is dialogue, without “excessive aggression” in rhetoric.

 ?? Domenico Stinellis / Associated Press ?? Papal adviser Archbishop Silvano Maria Tomasi says the Vatican hopes to send both Washington and Pyongyang a clear message: that the only way forward is through dialogue.
Domenico Stinellis / Associated Press Papal adviser Archbishop Silvano Maria Tomasi says the Vatican hopes to send both Washington and Pyongyang a clear message: that the only way forward is through dialogue.

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