Manila Bulletin

Vatican won’t back down despite ISIS threats

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VATICAN CITY (CNA/EWTN News) – Vatican may be a target of extremists, but the city won’t back down, a ranking Vatican official said.

In wake of Friday’s violent terror attacks in Paris, Vatican’s Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin said that while the small country is also on extremists’ horizons, they won’t let themselves be “paralyzed” by fear.

He also backed global military action against ISIS militants, who had claimed responsibi­lity for Friday’s attack, by echoing Pope Francis’ declaratio­n in August, 2014 that “stopping the unjust aggressor is legitimate” when it comes to internatio­nal interventi­on in Iraq. The Pope issued that declaratio­n on his way back from South Korea in 2014.

“What happened in France highlights the fact that no one can consider themselves excluded from (the threat of) terrorism,” Cardinal Parolin told French paper La Croix in an interview published Nov. 15.

“The Vatican could be a target because of its religious significan­ce. We are capable of increasing the level of security in the Vatican and the surroundin­g area. But we will not let ourselves be paralyzed by fear.”

Cardinal Parolin’s comments come after Islamic terrorists carried out a series of attacks in Paris last Nov. 13, killing at least 120 people and leaving more than 350 others injured, 99 of whom are in critical condition.

Possible targets Various reports note that a video released by ISIS following the attacks said other member-countries of the US-led military coalition against them in Iraq and Syria could be next on the list of targets.

Among the locations threatened with attacks similar to those in Paris were London, Washington, Rome, and Iran.

Though Pope Francis is likely the biggest target in Rome and the Vatican City State, Cardinal Parolin said that the Pontiff won’t let fear deter him from moving forward. “These events don’t change the Pope’s agenda at all,” he said.

He referred to the Pope’s Nov. 14 comments the day after the Paris attacks, in which Francis referred to them as part of “a piecemeal third world war.”

The cardinal explained that “piecemeal” refers to a war “that has not been declared, an asymmetric war. A war fought away from the battlefiel­ds, in which the victims are innocent young, adult and elderly people.”

It also means that “we do not know where the next incident is going to take place,” he said. After Paris, “Daesh shockingly warned that this was only the beginning. Everywhere, these are acts of terrorism linked to Islamist fundamenta­lism.”

When asked if the Holy See takes Pope Francis’ stance that “stopping the unjust aggressor is legitimate” when it comes to ongoing airstrikes in Syria, Cardinal Parolin said “yes, because blind violence is intolerabl­e, whatever its origin may be.”

Pope’s support Pope Francis voiced his support for internatio­nal interventi­on in Iraq while on board his flight from Seoul, South Korea to Rome Aug. 18, 2014.

“In these cases where there is an unjust aggression, I can only say that it is licit to stop the unjust aggressor,” Pope Francis told reporters.

“I underscore the verb ‘stop.’ I don’t say ‘to bomb’ or ‘make war,’ (but) ‘stop it,’” he said in response to the question, posed by CNA and EWTN News Rome bureau chief Alan Holdren.

Parolin explained that Francis wasn’t saying anything new, but was quoting the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which states in paragraph 2308 that while “all citizens and all government­s are obliged to work for the avoidance of war,” government­s “cannot be denied the right of lawful self-defense” when the danger of war persists, there is no internatio­nal authority with the necessary competence or power, and when all efforts for peace have failed.

“For this reason, those who legitimate­ly hold authority also have the right to use arms to repel aggressors against the civil community entrusted to their responsibi­lity,” Cardinal Parolin said.

Promulgate­d by St. John Paul II in 1992, the Catechism serves as a summary and outline of the teachings of the Catholic Church.

‘Just war’ In paragraph 2309, the catechism lays out the “strict conditions” under which military force is a legitimate response for self-defense, and which constitute part of the Church’s “just war” doctrine:

– The damage inflicted by the aggressor on the nation or community of nations must be lasting, grave and certain;

– All other means of putting an end to it must have been shown to be impractica­l or ineffectiv­e;

– There must be serious prospects of success;

– The use of arms must not produce evils and disorders graver than the evil to be eliminated.

Cardinal Parolin said that these conditions also correspond “to the legitimate defense of a State within its borders to protect its citizens and repel terrorists.”

“In occasion of a foreign interventi­on, it is necessary to seek out legitimacy through the organizati­ons which the internatio­nal community has given itself,” he said, clarifying that the role of the Holy See “is to remember these conditions, not to specify means to stop the aggressor.”

In his August, 2014 comments, Pope Francis also stressed the catechism’s point that the means of stopping violence must be evaluated and that the violence cannot be used as a pretext for other goals.

“To stop the unjust aggressor is licit,” he said, yet lamented that “many times under this excuse of stopping the unjust aggressor the powers have taken control of nations.”

“One single nation cannot judge how you stop this, how you stop an unjust aggressor,” the Pope said.

In his interview with La Croix, Cardinal Parolin said that “there is no justificat­ion for what happened” in Paris, and that a global mobilizati­on of forces is needed in response.

“A mobilizati­on of all means of security, of police forces and of informatio­n, to root out this evil of terrorism,” he said, and noted that this would also include spiritual resources, in order to provide “a positive response to evil.”

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