By Elisabetta Povoledo for the New York Times
The Vatican on Tuesday for the first time said that Russia was the aggressor in the Ukraine war, condemning Moscow’s invasion in strong terms after earlier comments by Pope Francis prompted criticism from Kyiv.
“As for the large-scale war in Ukraine, initiated by the Russian Federation, the interventions of the Holy Father Pope Francis are clear and unequivocal in condemning it as morally unjust, unacceptable, barbaric, senseless, repugnant and sacrilegious,” the Vatican said in a statement issued Tuesday.
Vatican experts said it was the first time that Francis has explicitly blamed Russia in the conflict.
Since Russia’s invasion in February, critics have said that Francis has risked his moral authority by failing to criticize President Vladimir V. Putin by name, upholding longstanding Vatican policy not to pick sides in a conflict to better preserve the church’s chances of playing a constructive role in potential peace talks.
Last week, Ukrainian officials were dismayed when Francis referred to Daria Dugina, a 29-year-old Russian ultranationalist who spoke out in favor of the invasion of Ukraine, and was killed by a car bomb, as an “innocent” victim.
“The madness of war,” Francis said at his weekly general audience. “The innocent pay for war — the innocent! Let us think about this reality and say to each other, ‘War is madness.’”
Afterward, Ukraine’s foreign minister summoned the Vatican’s ambassador to Ukraine to express “profound disappointment” in Francis’ words.
The Vatican immediately attempted to ease Ukraine’s concerns. In a statement to the Ukrainian edition of Vatican News last week, editorial director Andrea Tornielli said the pope sought to be “close to all those who suffer the consequences of the war, first of all the innocent population of Ukraine, which is dying under Russian bombs.”
But the statement issued on Tuesday suggested that the Vatican wanted to take a more forceful step to quell the controversy.
“On more than one occasion, as well as in recent days, public discussions have arisen as to the political significance” of the pope’s statements, adding that Francis’ words “are to be read as a voice raised in defense of human life and the values attached to it, and not as taking a political stance.”
Francis had been hoping to meet with Patriarch Kirill, the leader of the Russian Orthodox Church, during a gathering of religious leaders in Kazakhstan in mid-September. But the Russian state agency reported last week that the Russian Orthodox Church would be represented by an official delegation and that Kirill would not attend the gathering or hold a meeting with the pope on the sidelines.
Elisabetta Povoledo has been writing about Italy for nearly three decades, and has been working for The New York Times and its affiliates since 1992. @EPovoledo • Facebook
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The pope’s words, the Vatican said, “are to be read as a voice raised in defense of human life and the values attached to it, and not as taking a political stance.” Credit...Andrew Medichini/Associated Press
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