Pope Leo XIV Slams ‘Handful of Tyrants’ for Ravaging the World Amid Tensions with Trump
Greace Nunez Correspondent
graciela--nunez@hotmail.com | 2026-04-19 06:13:42
BAMENDA, Cameroon – In a blistering critique that appears aimed directly at the White House, Pope Leo XIV warned on Thursday that a "handful of tyrants" are ravaging the globe, further escalating a public war of words with U.S. President Donald Trump over the ethics of modern warfare and the manipulation of faith.
Speaking to a crowd in the northwestern Cameroonian city of Bamenda during his four-nation African tour, the American-born Pontiff delivered one of the most pointed speeches of his papacy. He condemned leaders who instrumentalize religious rhetoric to justify military aggression, specifically addressing the ongoing conflict involving Iran.
“Woe to those who manipulate the name of God and the sacred for their own military, economic, and political interests, dragging the divine into the darkness and filth,” the Pope declared. “The exploitation of God’s creation must be condemned and rejected by every honest conscience.”
The Pope’s remarks follow weeks of intensifying friction between the Vatican and the Trump administration. Last month, Leo XIV took aim at U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who has frequently used religious imagery to frame the war against Iran as a moral crusade. The Pope warned then that God would reject the prayers of leaders with "blood-stained hands."
The tension reached a fever pitch recently when President Trump attacked the Pontiff on social media, labeling him "weak on crime" and "terrible at foreign policy." The President also sparked international controversy by sharing an AI-generated image depicting himself in a Christ-like light, a move widely viewed as a provocation toward the Catholic Church.
In his speech on Thursday, the Pope also highlighted the staggering economic disparity between war and peace. “The masters of war pretend not to know that while destruction takes a moment, reconstruction takes a lifetime,” he said. “They turn a blind eye to the billions of dollars spent on murder and ruin, yet claim that funds for healing, education, and recovery are nowhere to be found.”
Political analysts suggest that the Pope’s "handful of tyrants" comment serves as a direct rebuttal to Trump’s unilateralist foreign policy. However, the President offered a slightly more nuanced response on Thursday, shifting the focus to human rights abuses within Iran.
“The Pope must understand that Iran has killed over 42,000 people in the last few months—unarmed protesters,” Trump stated, referring to the internal civil unrest in Tehran. “This is the real world, and it’s a horrible world.” Despite the retort, Trump added that he was "not fighting with the Pope," signaling a potential, albeit fragile, attempt to de-escalate the personal nature of the feud.
As the Pope continues his journey through Africa, his message remains a stark reminder of the Vatican's increasing willingness to challenge the world's most powerful superpowers on the moral grounds of global governance and the sanctity of life.
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