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We seek to keep you literally "updated" on movement in terms of truth and justice in the Middle East in general with a particular eye on Palestine. The links below will take you to various articles and websites that offer the perspective of leaders in the religious, NGO, and human rights communities. Additionally, Al-Bushra, ever vigilant, provides links to regular reporting as well as opinion pieces by journalists. The dates given here indicate when the link was posted; the most recent posting is at the top. Check the article itself for the date the information was released by the source.

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

No, the Vatican has not endorsed the US military action in Iraq


By Phil Lawler | Aug 12, 2014

Several internet sites are reporting that Pope Francis has endorsed the US bombing campaign in Iraq. Those reports are inaccurate.

Some leading Church officials—not including the Pope—have spoken in support of military action to prevent the continued slaughter of Christians. But none has endorsed the specific military plans laid out by President Obama.

Pope Francis has denounced the violence against Christians by the Islamic state, and urged international leaders to “protect all those affect or threatened by violence.” But he has not indicated what form an international intervention should take. He called for aid to the thousands of refugees driven from their homes. He has sent a personal envoy to Iraq to show solidarity with the persecuted Christians and to explore any possible route to peace. But he has said nothing about military action.

Other Vatican officials have addressd the question of military intervention. Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican’s representative at UN headquarters in Geneva, said that direct military action “is probably necessary” to save the lives of thousands of refugees. Archbishop Giorgio Lingua, the papal nuncio in Iraq, agreed that the air strikes were “something that had to be done.” But while those statements indicate reluctant approval of some military action, they cannot be interpreted as blanket endorsements of the US military plan.

In fact, the only Catholic prelate who has addressed the specific form of American intervention is Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Louis Sako, who has been sharply critical of the American military plan. The Iraqi prelate complains that targeted air strikes will be inadequate to save the Christian refugees, and will not halt the advance of the Islamic State.

While the Vatican has not released any policy statement in support of American military action, however, it is striking that there have been no warnings against such intervention. That silence is striking, particularly in contrast to the energetic lobbying campaigns that the Vatican mounted twice in the past, opposing US military action in Iraq. In a balanced analysis of the Vatican’s stand, John Allen of the Boston Globe explains the apparent shift in the Vatican’s stand:

One core reason the Vatican opposed the two Gulf Wars, as well as any expansion of the conflict in Syria, was fear that the fall of a police state in the Middle East would lead to the rise of a radical Islamic theocracy in which Christians and other minorities would find themselves in the firing line.
    

That’s no longer a theoretical anxiety. It’s the lived reality of the new caliphate proclaimed by the Islamic State, which means that the Vatican and other Christian leaders are no longer so worried about the aftermath of a conflict. They’re much more preoccupied by the here and now, and thus more inclined to back anyone who seems prepared to do something about it.

Source: http://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/the-city-gates.cfm?id=851

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