Pope
Francis Appeals for Peace amid Conflicts Supported and Inflamed by Trump
With
a focus on the impact of war, conflict, and inequality on the world's children,
Pope Francis delivered a Christmas Day sermon in Rome's St. Peter's Square on
Monday that catalogued a multitude of concerns with policies pushed by
President Donald Trump as well as previous U.S. presidents.
The
Pope restated his support for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, which was inflamed earlier this month by Trump's decision to
move the U.S. embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem—implicitly siding
with the Israelis in the decades-long dispute over the ancient city.
Noting
that children "suffer because of growing tensions" in the region, he
expressed hope that "the will to resume dialogue may prevail between the
parties and that a negotiated solution can finally be reached, one that would
allow the peaceful coexistence of two states within mutually agreed and
internationally recognized borders."
The pontiff's speech came days after the U.S. was left nearly isolated in its stance at the United Nations, with only seven relatively small countries expressing approval of Trump's decision, compared with 128 countries that voted to reject the move and 35 that abstained from voting.
The
vote came after threats from Trump and U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley threatened to
pull funding from countries that voted against the U.S.
In
addition to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Pope Francis made an appeal for
peace on behalf of children living in Syria, Yemen, and Iraq, all of which have
been engulfed in conflict in recent years.
Civilian deaths have surged under Trump in the U.S. fight against ISIS in Iraq and Syria, while U.S.-backed Saudi airstrikes in Yemen have left the country in a state of chaos, grappling with a cholera epidemic and a state of near-famine for eight million people.
The
Pope addressed the plight of refugees all over the world, without directly
calling out Trump's ban on travelers from several countries and his pledge to
build a wall at the U.S.-Mexico border to keep immigrants out of the country
but making a veiled reference to policies that close borders off to refugees.