Concerns over plan to help Australia with nuclear-powered subs

Concerns over plan to help Australia with nuclear-powered subs
The French nuclear missile submarine, Le Triomphant, in this undated photo released by the French Navy. Photo: CNS /French Navy via Reuters

ROME (CNS): Plans by the United States and Great Britain to give Australia the technology needed for nuclear-powered submarines go counter to global disarmament efforts, said Vatican secretary of state, Pietro Cardinal Parolin.

“The Holy See is against rearmament,” he told reporters on September 22. “Efforts have been and are being made to eliminate nuclear weapons because they are not the way to maintain peace and security in the world, but they create even more danger for peace and conflict.”

The cardinal said, “One cannot but be concerned” by the announcement made in mid-September of the Aukus [AUKUS]security partnership by president of the United States, Joe Biden; British prime minister, Boris Johnson; and Australian prime minister, Scott Morrison. The move caught France, which The Guardian reported was to supply Australia with conventionally-powered attack submarines, by surprise and drew its ire. 

Cardinal Parolin, Jean-Claude Cardinal Hollerich of Luxembourg, president of the Commission of Bishops’ Conferences of the European Union and Peter Cardinal Turkson, president of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, were speaking at a conference on Christian Values and the Future of Europe, sponsored by the European People’s Party.

Asked about participating in an event sponsored by a political party, the cardinal said that many members of the party describe themselves and their agendas as Christian, therefore it is important that Church representatives have a chance to explain what they see as pressing issues and responsible solutions.

“In Christianity, one does not choose just what one likes or finds comfortable,” he said, but “in Christianity, one must accept everything.”

It is not like “going to the supermarket and taking this and that,” the cardinal said. Such selection risks manipulating religion “for political purposes.”

Reporters also asked Cardinal Parolin about comments Pope Francis made to Jesuits during his trip to Slovakia. According to a transcript released on September 21 by Civilta Cattolica, the pope said that some people had hoped he would die this summer when he underwent colon surgery.

“I know there were even meetings between [cardinals] who thought the pope’s condition was more serious than the official version. They were preparing for the conclave,” the pope continued.

“Honestly,” Cardinal Parolin said, “I have not felt that there was this climate,” although someone seems to have told the pope there was.

___________________________________________________________________________