🇺🇸🇻🇦 𝗧𝗿𝘂𝗺𝗽 | 𝗣𝗼𝗽𝗲 𝗟𝗲𝗼 𝗫𝗜𝗩

Trump's threat to destroy "an entire civilization" was indefensible by any measure. The office he holds gives his words a weight that private citizens do not carry, and he should be held accountable for it.

That accountability, however, does not require selective blindness.
1/10

Donald Trump was in office and ICE enforcement against Latin American immigrant communities was at its peak intensity when Pope Leo XIV was elected in April 2025, four ballots over two days, one of the shortest conclaves in modern history.

That outcome was not accidental. Leo spent decades as a missionary and bishop in Peru, and the Catholic Church's center of gravity now sits in Latin America. The conclave understood both the man and the moment it was responding to.
2/10

Trump is correct in a narrow sense that his presence made Leo's profile more relevant. He is not correct that he made him pope. Collapsing those claims is self-serving.

Leo's criticism of Trump is similarly dispassionate, and it is not balanced when measured against the full scope of state conduct he chooses to address.
3/10

The Islamic Republic of Iran has executed tens of thousands of its own citizens over 27 years, including protesters, dissidents, women who refused state-imposed compliance, and religious minorities.

It has financed and armed proxy organizations responsible for mass civilian casualties across the Greater Middle East and elsewhere. That record is neither ambiguous nor obscure.
4/10

What is conspicuously absent from Leo's rebukes is an equivalent pattern of urgency, specificity, and repetition directed at the states Trump's actions target.

Not a president's intemperate rhetoric, but governments across Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East that systematically murder and torture their own citizens, suppress women and minorities under force of law, and export terror abroad as deliberate state policy.
5/10

A man formed by decades of pastoral work in communities directly shaped by U.S. immigration and foreign policy does not arrive at this moment without perspective. His criticism reflects that perspective, and so does the selective way his moral authority is being applied.

Trump was wrong, and the media predictably locked onto the most combustible element of the story.
6/10

The more difficult question is why the Pope's moral voice, in this case, is not being applied with the same intensity across a far broader and well-documented record of state violence and repression.

Leo is not speaking from outside politics. He is operating within a defined political and demographic constituency he spent decades cultivating, using the language of moral authority to advance the institutional positioning of a Church competing for relevance in the Global South.
7/10

Trump, deserving of criticism on many levels, is a uniquely convenient foil at a moment when opposition to him is nearly universal outside the United States.

The threat is that the cost of that asymmetry is being ignored.
8/10

Positioning the Church against U.S. engagement in the developing world does not only target its failures, it erodes the benefits and legitimacy of stabilization efforts, human rights enforcement, rule of law, and economic investment the United States brings into the same regions Leo is attempting to reach.

And it opens the door for less benevolent actors, whose interest is not development but control and extraction.

Fanning that hostility is not pastoral care.
9/10

It is strategic alignment, expressed in moral language, with potentially dangerous consequences for the same populations it claims to defend.

#Analysis #PopeLeo #Trump #Iran
10/10

@OSINTIntuit

i don't really buy this. Smacks of the same "well he didn't preface his remarks by condemning X" we are well used to from any interview with an opponent of imperialism. Leo took aim at Trump because it is the US empire that is conducting imperial aggression. Though Iran and others have undoubtedly violated their population's rights, the US empire forms the superstructure. The "goods" of empire are overblown, extractivist anyway and are steadily being jettisoned in favour of hard power only barbarism. And in any case, Leo isn't strategising to render the Catholic church relevant, he's articulating a moral and spiritual position that traces it's legacy back to, you know, Jeebs himself.