November 24, 2024

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He is a passionate advocate for peace, but Pope Francis’s latest controversial Ukraine comments clash with the Vatican’s official line and risk hampering its diplomatic efforts to end the war with Russia.

Ukraine should “have the courage to raise the white flag and negotiate” and do so “before things get worse”, the 87-year-old pontiff said in an interview broadcast this weekend.

A furious Kyiv accused the pope of ignoring international law, summoned the Vatican envoy, and vowed “never” to surrender.

Francis’s comments also attracted a lot of criticism on social networks, with pro-Ukrainian accounts depicting him with the face of Russian President Vladimir Putin or dressed in the colours of Russia, which has seized large swathes of Ukrainian territory since its 2022 invasion.

Despite Francis’s repeated calls for peace, he is often accused of sowing confusion.

“It was an unfortunate use of the term ‘white flag’, which is synonymous with surrender,” one Vatican source, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP. “It surprised a lot of people”, the source said.

The Vatican attempted to explain it away by insisting that “white flag” in this situation meant “a cessation of hostilities”.

Secretary of State Pietro Parolin, the pope’s number two, insisted in an interview with the Corriere della Sera newspaper on Tuesday that Francis has called for the conditions for a diplomatic solution which would lead to a lasting peace.

“The prerequisite” for a negotiated solution is to “put an end to the aggression… and the aggressors must first of all be the ones to cease fire,” he said, without naming Russia or Putin directly.

– ‘Advantages, limits’ –

It is not the first time the head of the Catholic Church has sparked controversy with comments on the conflict.

At the end of 2022, the Vatican apologised to Moscow after the pope’s reference to the allegedly cruel behaviour of Russian ethnic minorities.

And in August 2023, Francis invited young Russian Catholics to claim the heritage of the “great Russia” of Peter the Great and Catherine II.

Kyiv accused him of relaying “imperialist propaganda” from Moscow, forcing the Holy See to clarify.

Vatican experts are increasingly asked whether these are papal blunders or reflect Francis’s real position.

His predecessors had “a culture of Western diplomacy”, said Francois Mabille, director of the Geopolitical Observatory of Religion at the Institute of International and Strategic Affairs (IRIS) in Paris.

But the Argentine pope has “a non-European outlook, with advantages but also limits”, he told AFP.

Vatican expert John Allen says the pontiff’s actions are “neither arbitrary nor irrational”.

“They are a deliberate response to how the Catholic Church is changing — and will continue to change — in the 21st century,” he wrote in the Atlantic, referring to its decline in Europe and growth elsewhere.

As Italian Vaticanist Marco Politi told AFP, Francis is “diplomatically isolated among NATO countries”, but is “on the same wavelength as the majority of states in the world”.

And he is also capturing public sentiment, even in the West, for “a large part of European and even American public opinion does not want to exhaust itself in a war of attrition,” or pay a heavy economic price, Politi said.

– ‘Activist pope’ –

Francis’s most controversial comments are unscripted and are often made during interviews.

While John Paul II improvised little, and “Benedict XVI was truly a man of the written word”, Francis “is a pope who speaks a lot”, including to the press, multiplying the risks of veering off message, Mabille said.

Francis, “fundamentally pacifist… is more of an activist pope than the head of state popes we have known before”, he said.

Often criticised for his solitary exercise of power, Francis regularly leaves his press office or diplomats scrambling.

“We see a sort of dissociation between the pontifical word and the word of the diplomatic apparatus,” Mabille said.

“The secretariat of state is almost systematically obliged to try to explain his words.”

The Vatican has been seeking to use its ultra-discreet diplomacy, which boasts previous successes such as a re-opening of diplomatic relations between the US and Cuba in 2014, on Ukraine.

But Francis’s regular appeals for peace appear to fall on deaf ears, while the diplomatic tour by his emissary, Italian Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, has largely gone unnoticed, despite stops in Washington, Kyiv, Moscow and Beijing.

AFP

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