Allies Join Ukraine in Criticizing Pope's 'White Flag' Remark

Responses include references to prewar appeasement of Hitler
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 10, 2024 11:15 AM CDT
Pope's 'White Flag' Comment Upsets Ukraine, Allies
Pope Francis reads his message during the Angelus noon prayer from the window of his studio overlooking St. Peter's Square at the Vatican on Sunday.   (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

Ukrainian and allied officials criticized Pope Francis for saying that Kyiv should have the "courage" to negotiate an end to the war with Russia, a statement many interpreted as a call for Ukraine to surrender. The foreign minister of Poland, a vocal ally of Kyiv, and Ukraine's ambassador to the Vatican both used World War II analogies to condemn the pope's remarks, the AP reports. And a leader of one of Ukraine's Christian churches on Sunday said that only the country's determined resistance to Moscow's full-scale invasion, launched by Russian President Vladimir Putin on Feb. 24, 2022, had prevented a mass slaughter of civilians.

In an interview recorded last month with Swiss broadcaster RSI and partially released on Saturday, Francis used the phrase "the courage of the white flag" in arguing that Ukraine, facing a possible defeat, should be open to peace talks brokered by international powers. "How about, for balance, encouraging Putin to have the courage to withdraw his army from Ukraine? Peace would immediately ensue without the need for negotiations," Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski responded with a post on X, formerly Twitter. In a separate post, Sikorski drew parallels between those calling for negotiations while "denying (Ukraine) the means to defend itself" and European leaders' appeasement of Adolf Hitler just before World War II.

Andrii Yurash, Ukraine's ambassador to the Holy See, said it was "necessary to learn lessons" from that conflict. His tweet seemed to compare the pope's comments to calls for "talking with Hitler" while raising "a white flag to satisfy him." A Vatican spokesman later clarified that the pope supported "a stop to hostilities (and) a truce achieved with the courage of negotiations," rather than an outright Ukrainian surrender. He said the journalist interviewing Francis used the term "white flag" in the question put to the pope.
"I think that the strongest one is the one who looks at the situation, thinks about the people and has the courage of the white flag, and negotiates," Francis said.

(More Russia-Ukraine war stories.)

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