Congress, Pope Francis Calls Out the ‘Industry
of Death’
In his speech to U.S. lawmakers, the "People's pope" condemned
the arms trade, war profiteering, and even the war on terror
itself.
By Phyllis Bennis and Manuel Perez-Rocha
September 25, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "FPIF
"- Pope Francis’ address to Congress
was almost certainly not what John Boehner, Mitch McConnell, and
other congressional leaders had in mind when they invited the
pope to speak.
It probably wasn’t what they were all thinking
about during the last standing ovations. But here was Pope
Francis, revered as the People’s Pope, calling out war
profiteers and demanding an end to the arms trade. Just as
simple and as powerful as that.
It came near the end of
his speech — after his calls to protect the rights of
immigrants and refugees, end the death penalty, preserve the
planet from the ravages of climate change, and defend the poor
and dispossessed.
“Being at the service of dialogue and peace
also means being truly determined to minimize and, in the long
term, to end the many armed conflicts throughout our world,” the
pope said. Then he asked the critical question: “Why are deadly
weapons being sold to those who plan to inflict untold suffering
on individuals and society?”
He answered it himself: “Sadly, the answer, as
we all know, is simply for money: money that is drenched in
blood, often innocent blood. In the face of this shameful and
culpable silence, it is our duty to confront the problem and to
stop the arms trade.”
Stop the arms trade. What a simple, clear
call.
That means the ending things like the
$60 billion arms deal the U.S. made a few years back with
Saudi Arabia, where those weapons are, in the pope’s words,
“inflicting untold suffering on individuals and society,”
especially in Syria and Yemen. It means ending things like the
$45 billion in new military aid — mostly in the form of
advanced new weapons — the Israeli government has requested from
Washington between now and 2028. It means ending the provision
of new arms to
scores of unaccountable militias in Syria, where
even the White House admits a non-military solution is
needed. And it means ending things like the $1.1
billion in arms sales the United States has made to Mexico
this year alone.
And, of course, it means no longer diverting
at least 54 cents of every discretionary taxpayer dollar in
the federal budget to the U.S. military.
Actually, members of Congress — so many of
whom rely on
huge campaign donations from arms manufacturers, and so many
of whom refuse to vote against military procurement because
often just a few dozen jobs connected to it might be in
their district — really should have expected the pope
to say exactly what he did.
It was only last May, after all, that Pope
Francis told a group of schoolchildren visiting the Vatican
that the arms trade is the “industry
of death.” When a kid asked why so many powerful people
don’t want peace, the pope answered simply, “because they live
off wars!” Francis explained how people become rich by producing
and selling weapons. “And this is why so many people do not want
peace. They make more money with the war!”
The pope’s speech to Congress was quite
extraordinary on a number of fronts.
His
clear call to end the death penalty was the only example he
gave of protecting the sanctity of life: Even amid a raging
congressional debate over Planned Parenthood, he never mentioned
abortion.
He invoked the golden rule as the basis for
responding to refugee crises, calling for leaders to respond “in
a way which is always humane, just, and fraternal” and reminding
his audience that “so many of you are also descended from
immigrants.” He added, “We need to avoid a common temptation
nowadays: to discard whatever proves troublesome.”
Francis also reasserted the need for
“courageous actions and strategies” on reversing “environmental
deterioration caused by human activity.” And crucially, he
linked those strategies to include “combating poverty, restoring
dignity to the excluded, and at the same time protecting
nature.”
It was all pretty amazing.
However, one might have hoped for a stronger
defense of indigenous rights, especially in the wake of his
canonization of Junipero Serra — a Spanish missionary who
provided religious cover to
some of the worst colonialist atrocities against indigenous
people in what is now California.
The pope did recognize that “tragically, the
rights of those who were here long before us were not always
respected,” but hedged that while “those first contacts were
often turbulent and violent,” it’s “difficult to judge the past
by the criteria of the present.” That was disappointing —
especially for a pope who’s gone to great lengths to condemn the
“new
colonialism” of exploitative economic policies toward the
Global South. Perhaps in response to the Native critics of the
sainthood announcement, he added that “we must not repeat the
sins and the errors of the past.”
But on issues of war and peace, Francis was
unambiguous. He didn’t speak about only ending the arms trade.
He also referred, albeit obliquely, to Washington’s war on
terror and why it’s failing. “We know that in the attempt to be
freed of the enemy without, we can be tempted to feed the enemy
within,” he observed. “To imitate the hatred and violence of
tyrants and murderers is the best way to take their place.”
Then, perhaps thinking of the tens of
thousands of people cheering the pope outside the Capitol walls
— rather than the powerful war-makers in the chamber in front of
him — he acknowledged “that is something which you, as a people,
reject.”
That’s not even close to true today. But it
certainly gives us something to work on. Boy do we have a lot of
work to do.
Phyllis Bennis directs the New
Internationalism project at the Institute for Policy Studies,
where Manuel Perez-Rocha is an associate fellow.