By Common
Dreams for
At a Vatican seminar
attended by Nobel Peace Prize winners, United Nations officials, and
representatives from countries with nuclear capabilities, Pope Francis urged
leaders to move towards nuclear disarmament on Friday.
The pontiff's speech came
a week after he made a plea for an end to "useless massacres" in an anti-war speech at
a military cemetery in Italy, in which he alluded to the rising tensions
between the U.S. and North Korea, exacerbated in recent months by President
Donald Trump's bellicose threats in response to Kim Jong-un's nuclear tests.
Pope Francis argued that
the insistence on maintaining nuclear arsenals by nations including the United
States, North Korea, and France "creates nothing but a false sense of
security," and therefore total disarmament is the only acceptable solution.
"Weapons that result
in the destruction of the human race are senseless even from a tactical
standpoint," added the pope.
Pope Francis also
expressed "gratitude and appreciation" for the U.N.'s recent treaty calling
for an elimination of nuclear weapons. The agreement was adopted in July, but
all the nuclear states abstained from voting. So far, three parties have
ratified the treaty.
The seminar signified a
shift in the Catholic Church's tolerance of the existence of nuclear programs.
Bishops in the U.S. expressed a "strictly conditional moral acceptance of
deterrence" but the Pope's recent remarks indicate that the conditions may
now call for a policy change.
"The church's
tolerance of deterrence was predicated on it being a step toward
disarmament," said Stephen
Colecchi, director of the U.S. bishops' conference's Office of International
Justice and Peace, in an interview with the National Catholic Reporter.
Today,
regimes are "planning modernization of nuclear weapons. You don't
modernize a weapons system that you intend to disarm from. So I think
deterrence is on very thin moral grounds."