The Pope sends warning to Trump as he breaks his silence on Iran war
by VICTORIA CHURCHILL, US POLITICAL REPORTER · Mail OnlinePope Leo XIV sent a strong message to US President Donald Trump regarding military actions in the Middle East while speaking in the Vatican on Sunday.
'I am following with deep concern what is happening in the Middle East and in Iran during this tumultuous time,' the Pope noted in his speech.
'Stability and peace are not achieved through mutual threats, nor through the use of weapons, which sow destruction, suffering, and death, but only through reasonable, sincere, and responsible dialogue,' he added.
His speech was delivered just after Trump promised to strike Iran 'with a force that has never been seen before,' after the regime vowed revenge following the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Leo XIV is the first-ever American-born Pope.
The pontifex also warned of further large-scale bloodshed if escalations continue.
'Faced with the possibility of a tragedy of enormous proportions,' he added, 'I address to the parties involved a heartfelt appeal to assume the moral responsibility to stop the spiral of violence before it becomes an irreparable abyss!'
Pope Leo also prayed for nations to revisit diplomatic solutions to securing peace.
'May diplomacy recover its role and may the good of peoples be promoted, peoples who long for peaceful coexistence founded on justice,' he noted, 'And let us continue to pray for peace.'
In an eight-minute speech, given from his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Saturday, the President said he had ordered a 'major' strike on Iran after nuclear negotiations between the two countries had broken down.
Our objective is to defend the American people by eliminating imminent threats from the Iranian regime, a vicious group of very hard, terrible people,' Trump said.
He, again, reiterated that the Iranian regime must never obtain a nuclear weapon.
While Trump's military maneuvering so far in his second term - the January capture of Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro and the 'Midnight Hammer' attack on Iranian nuclear facilities in June - haven't cost service members' lives, he warned that Americans could die this time around.
'Even so, and I do not make this statement lightly, the Iranian regime seeks to kill,' Trump said. 'The lives of courageous American heroes may be lost and we may have casualties.'
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'That often happens in war,' the commander-in-chief added. 'But we’re doing this not for now, we’re doing this for the future and it is a noble mission.'
Trump called out the Iranian regime and their proxies for creating 'mass terror' around the world, but he also pointed to the Tehran's recent mass murder domestically, of protesters in their own streets.
In mid-January, the President had promised those protesters that 'help is on the way.'