Live
Black Hat USAAI BusinessBlack Hat AsiaAI Business9 companies that have done AI-related layoffsBusiness InsiderSlack's upgraded AI can analyze how you workEngadgetTown hall in Bay Ridge spotlights AI concerns in NYC public schools - BKReaderGoogle News: AI SafetyOpenAI announces new ‘human powered’ ChatGPT-6 - huckmag.comGoogle News: ChatGPTGoogle Fixes AI Coding Agents' Outdated Code Problem - The Tech BuzzGoogle News: DeepMindThese car gadgets are worth every pennyZDNet AIContributor: Investigate the AI campaigns flooding public agencies with fake comments - Los Angeles TimesGoogle News: AIGoogle Faces Demands to Prohibit AI Videos for Kids on YouTubeBloomberg TechnologyWhy Enterprise AI Stalls Before It Scales - AI BusinessGoogle News: Generative AIThese pocket-sized tech gadgets are packed with purpose (and they're inexpensive)ZDNet AIHershey applies AI across its supply chain operations - AI NewsGoogle News: AIThe AI Video Apps Gaining Ground After OpenAI Declared Sora Dead - Bloomberg.comGoogle News: OpenAIBlack Hat USAAI BusinessBlack Hat AsiaAI Business9 companies that have done AI-related layoffsBusiness InsiderSlack's upgraded AI can analyze how you workEngadgetTown hall in Bay Ridge spotlights AI concerns in NYC public schools - BKReaderGoogle News: AI SafetyOpenAI announces new ‘human powered’ ChatGPT-6 - huckmag.comGoogle News: ChatGPTGoogle Fixes AI Coding Agents' Outdated Code Problem - The Tech BuzzGoogle News: DeepMindThese car gadgets are worth every pennyZDNet AIContributor: Investigate the AI campaigns flooding public agencies with fake comments - Los Angeles TimesGoogle News: AIGoogle Faces Demands to Prohibit AI Videos for Kids on YouTubeBloomberg TechnologyWhy Enterprise AI Stalls Before It Scales - AI BusinessGoogle News: Generative AIThese pocket-sized tech gadgets are packed with purpose (and they're inexpensive)ZDNet AIHershey applies AI across its supply chain operations - AI NewsGoogle News: AIThe AI Video Apps Gaining Ground After OpenAI Declared Sora Dead - Bloomberg.comGoogle News: OpenAI

'Nothing Wrong': White House Responds to Pope Leo XIV's Criticism of Donald Trump's War in Iran

International Business TimesMarch 31, 20261 min read0 views
Source Quiz

Karoline Leavitt has defended Donald Trump's Iran war after Pope Leo XIV said 'God does not listen to the prayer of those who wage war', insisting there is 'nothing wrong' with the White House urging Americans to pray for troops.

The White House has defended President Donald Trump's war in Iran after Pope Leo XIV condemned leaders who 'wage war', with Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt insisting there was 'nothing wrong' with calling on Americans to pray for troops.

Speaking at a Monday afternoon briefing in Washington, Leavitt was pressed on the Pope's remarks about the month‑long conflict, which has killed 13 US service members, wounded more than 300 others and rattled global oil markets, and was asked directly whether the Vatican's warning applied to President Trump.

The news came after Pope Leo appeared to denounce the US‑Israeli campaign against Iran in a Sunday address, declaring that 'God does not listen to the prayer of those who wage war'.

White House Backs Trump And Sidesteps Pope Leo's Rebuke

When reporters invited Karoline Leavitt to respond to Pope Leo's intervention, she did not directly engage with the core of his criticism. Instead, she framed the issue as one of faith and tradition rather than of moral responsibility for launching a war.

'Our nation was a nation founded 250 years ago almost on Judeo‑Christian values. And we have seen presidents, the leaders of the department of war, and our troops go to prayer during the most turbulent times in our nation's history,' Leavitt said.

Leavitt framed the prayer call as standard practice. 'I don't think there is anything wrong with our military leaders or with the president calling on the American people to pray for our service members overseas,' she added.

She suggested that US troops were grateful for the prayers being offered on their behalf.

Pope Leo's Appeal To 'Renounce Weapons'

Pope Leo's comments were not limited to a single line about prayer. In early March, a few weeks after Washington launched joint operations with Israel against Iran, he used the Vatican's monthly video message to urge nations to 'renounce weapons and choose the path of dialogue and diplomacy'.

On Sunday, the pontiff appeared to condemn the US‑Israeli strikes on Iran, declaring that “God does not listen to the prayer of those who wage war.” Earlier in March, just weeks after Washington joined Israel in launching the campaign in the Middle East, he had urged nations to “renounce weapons and choose the path of dialogue and diplomacy.”

His words, delivered as part of a regular series that usually focuses on prayer intentions, called on leaders in Washington, Tel Aviv and Tehran to 'abandon projects of death, halt the arms race and place the lives of the most vulnerable at the centre'.

'May the nuclear threat never again dictate the future of humanity,' the Pope added in the video.

The Vatican did not name Trump personally. The United States and Israel had only recently initiated strikes in the region, and international criticism of the campaign had been growing since the first wave of attacks in late February.

Trump's Shifting Justifications For The Iran War

According to the reporting cited, President Trump has offered several overlapping explanations.

He has argued that the campaign is necessary to prevent Iran's Islamic regime from building a nuclear weapon, casting the war as a grim but essential step to head off a future catastrophe. Yet that sits awkwardly with his earlier boasts that US airstrikes in June had "obliterated" Tehran's nuclear capabilities.

After the initial strikes in the current conflict, Trump again altered his emphasis, claiming Iran was only months away from acquiring a nuclear device, a claim that raised immediate questions about the quality of the intelligence he was relying on.

Donald Trump

The tension became harder to ignore when the president's own National Counterterrorism Center Director resigned several weeks after Pope Leo's message. The official cited a report concluding that Iran posed no imminent threat to the United States.

European allies have also expressed scepticism that Iran can be bombed or sanctioned into surrendering its nuclear ambitions. From their perspective, the idea that the regime will simply relinquish its capabilities under pressure looks more like wishful thinking than strategy.

Pope Leo XIV's plea to 'halt the arms race and centre the vulnerable' hit as Iran war support waned. Energy markets have buckled, fuel costs soared and nuclear fears loom in a region prone to missteps with global fallout.

The White House digs in. Leavitt's claim that there is 'nothing wrong' with wartime prayer reveals a team more focused on its own righteousness than answering the pope's point that war-makers cannot just pray their way clean. No word yet from Trump or his inner circle on the pope's 'projects of death' line.

Originally published on IBTimes UK

Was this article helpful?

Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

AI
Ask AI about this article
Powered by AI News Hub · full article context loaded
Ready

Conversation starters

Ask anything about this article…

Daily AI Digest

Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.

Knowledge Map

Knowledge Map
TopicsEntitiesSource
'Nothing Wr…Internation…

Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph

This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.

Knowledge Graph100 articles · 159 connections
Scroll to zoom · drag to pan · click to open

Discussion

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!

More in Analyst News