"They
treat the rupture of my people lightly, saying,
'Peace, peace,' but there is no peace."
Jeremiah
6:14
Act
One: In January 2004 Dick Cheney concluded his tour of Europe
with a visit to the Vatican where he was received by John Paul
II.
Ten
months earlier the United States had invaded Iraq in a display
of "Shock and Awe" and was now settling into its occupation. The
U.S. was still waging war in Afghanistan, and it had been two
years since the first detainees had arrived at Guantánamo.
The
New York Times wrote, "the pope did not mention Iraq
but
sitting with Mr. Cheney in the papal library, John Paul talked
in English about the importance of peace and respect for human
life."
Dick
Cheney presented the pope a crystal dove. The pope accepted it.
|
"The
pope did not mention Iraq
but sitting with Mr. Cheney
in the papal library, John Paul talked in English about
the importance of peace and respect for human life."
- The New York Times
|
James
Nicholson, the American ambassador to the Holy See, said that
when Cheney met with Vatican Secretary of State Angelo Sodano
they did not revisit the invasion of Iraq. "It was a forward-looking
conversation," he said.
Before
leaving Italy, Cheney stopped at Aviano Air Base, the largest
American military airport in southern Europe. Flanked by an Air
Force F-16C fighter and an Army UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter, he
told members of the military and their families that ''America
led a mission to make the world safer.''
A
few weeks later the U.S. Marines would attack Fallujah for the
first time, and shortly thereafter the world would see the photographs
of Abu Ghraib. By November, just days after being returned to
office, the administration would order the siege of Fallujah.
The City of Mosques would be cordoned off and its 300,000 inhabitants
forced to flee into the desert. A convoy of Red Cross relief trucks
would languish on the outskirts, denied entry by U.S. troops while
water supplies were cut and hospitals attacked. By Christmas Fallujah
would be rubble.
Act Two:
This week Josef Ratzinger, now Benedict XVI, traveled to Washington
where he was received by George Bush on Wednesday morning at the
White House.
|
By
November (2004), just days after being returned to office,
the (Bush) administration would order the siege of Fallujah...
A convoy of Red Cross relief trucks would languish on the
outskirts, denied entry by U.S. troops while water supplies
were cut and hospitals attacked. By Christmas Fallujah would
be rubble.
|
Three
more years have passed, and the country of Iraq is in chaos, its
civilization shattered. More than a million Iraqis are dead while
4,500,000 have been forced to flee their homes, most saying they
will never be able to return.
The United
States recently announced the completion of its largest embassy
in the world, a highly fortified compound in the heart of Baghdad,
and five military bases the size of small cities are now a permanent
part of the Iraqi landscape.
United States
officials and Vatican spokespersons predicted the pope's visit
would be forward-looking, avoiding contentious mention of Iraq.
George Weigel, a Catholic theologian and author of Faith, Reason
and the War Against Jihadism said, "The Vatican is a very adult
place. The arguments of five years ago are over."
Addressing
the guests on the White House lawn, the pope said, "From the dawn
of the Republic, America's quest for freedom has been guided by
the conviction that the principles governing political and social
life are intimately linked to a moral order based on the dominion
of God the Creator," and he praised the United States as a country
that "has traditionally shown herself generous in meeting immediate
human needs."
George
Bush and the pope then met privately before issuing a joint statement
in which they "reaffirmed their total rejection of terrorism as
well as the manipulation of religion to justify immoral and violent
acts against innocents."
|
George
Bush and the pope then met privately before issuing a joint
statement in which they "reaffirmed their total rejection
of terrorism as well as the manipulation of religion to
justify immoral and violent acts against innocents."
|
During their
personal meeting George Bush presented the pope a crystal cross.
The pope
accepted it.
Act
Three: On Wednesday evening Barack Obama assured Americans that
when it comes to Iran he "will take no options off the table,"
a position he shares with the Bush administration and the other
presidential candidates.
Note:
Andrew Wimmer is a member of the Center for Theology and Social
Analysis in St. Louis, MO. He welcomes your comments and conversation.
He can be reached at wimmera@gmail.com.
The above article was posted on the Counterpunch website.