Pope criticises 'tyrants' who spend billions on wars, days after Trump spat
Pope Francis denounces leaders who prioritize military spending over human needs, in remarks seen as a pointed response to recent criticism from the White House.
Pope Francis denounces leaders who prioritize military spending over human needs, in remarks seen as a pointed response to recent criticism from the White House. | Contesto: cronaca
Punti chiave
- Pope criticises 'tyrants' who spend billions on wars, days after Trump spat
Contesto
Pope Francis has issued a sharp condemnation of "tyrants" who pour billions into weapons and warfare while neglecting the poor, delivering his remarks just days after a public dispute with U.S. President Donald Trump. Speaking from the Vatican, the pontiff did not name any specific leader but framed the critique as a global moral failure, arguing that vast resources are diverted to armaments that should instead address hunger, disease, and education. The timing of the Pope's address gives it significant political resonance, coming on the heels of a direct exchange with President Trump. Earlier this week, the American president labeled the Pope "weak" on issues of crime and security, a rare public rebuke of a pontiff by a sitting U.S. leader. While Francis's latest homily avoided explicit reference to the United States or its president, the thematic focus on misplaced priorities and strength-through-violence was widely interpreted as a substantive, if indirect, rebuttal. This is not the first instance of tension between the Vatican and the Trump administration. The Pope has consistently championed a doctrine centered on mercy, care for refugees, and economic justice, positions that have often clashed with the president's policies on immigration, environmental regulation, and national security. The current friction over the definition of "strength"—whether it resides in military might or in social compassion—highlights a deepening philosophical divide between two of the world's most prominent figures. Analysts note that Francis's choice of the word "tyrants" carries particular weight in Catholic social teaching, evoking a tradition of challenging authoritarian power. His critique extends beyond individual leaders to a systemic critique of a global economy that profits from conflict. "When you see the budgets of some nations, how they are spent on weapons, it makes you shudder," the Pope stated, suggesting that such spending constitutes a theft from humanity's most vulnerable. The Vatican has maintained that the Pope's message is pastoral, not political, aimed at all nations engaged in an arms race. However, the juxtaposition of his sermon against the backdrop of...
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Categoria: cronaca