By A. DiNardo
ROME-RUTHENIA 12 March 2026 (NRom)
In response to the rapidly escalating armed conflict in the Middle East and the growing humanitarian crisis affecting civilians across the region, His Holiness Pope Radislav I of Rome-Ruthenia has issued a formal statement calling for an immediate cessation of hostilities and a renewed commitment to diplomatic negotiations.
The statement emphasizes the grave moral responsibility borne by political and military leaders when the use of force leads to widespread civilian suffering and risks broadening regional instability. It highlights the disproportionate burden that modern warfare places on ordinary families: those displaced from their homes, deprived of livelihood, or mourning loved ones lost in violence.
Drawing upon the Church’s moral teaching regarding the limits of armed force, the Roman-Ruthenian Pope stresses that even claims of just cause must be weighed carefully against the humanitarian consequences of military action. He warns that continued escalation not only deepens the suffering of those directly caught in the conflict but also threatens global stability through economic disruption, strained energy supplies, and wider geopolitical tensions.
While acknowledging the complexity of international conflicts, the statement affirms that dialogue and diplomacy remain the only viable path toward a just and lasting peace. Negotiation, His Holiness writes, is not a sign of weakness but an act of responsible leadership when the alternative is the continued loss of innocent life.
The following is the full text of His Holiness’s statement.
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Statement on the Escalation of Armed Conflict and the Suffering of Civilians
12 March 2026
The United Roman-Ruthenian Church calls for an immediate cessation of hostilities and a return to serious diplomatic negotiations in the present conflict in the Middle East. Recent military actions have not only caused a humanitarian crisis extending beyond the region, they have already ignited a wider regional conflict that places civilian populations and global humanitarian stability at risk. Thus we urge all parties to return to the path of dialogue that was already underway when the hostile path was chosen, working towards a peaceful resolution which alone can bring a just and durable peace.
War always brings suffering to the innocent. In every conflict in the modern era it is civilians who bear the heaviest burden: families displaced, homes destroyed, livelihoods shattered, and lives lost that should never have been taken. The Church therefore raises its voice first and foremost for those who have no voice in the councils of war. We speak for the poor and the suffering who are marginalized by the actions of others.
We also note that the present escalation carries grave consequences beyond the battlefield. Disruption of energy supplies, global economic instability, and the interruption of essential goods to various otherwise-uninvolved countries threaten the welfare of countless people far removed from the immediate conflict. In an interdependent world, war in one region quickly becomes hardship for many others.
Our faith clearly teaches that the use of force must always be governed by strict moral limits, undertaken only under grave necessity and never without deep moral responsibility. Even when nations claim just cause, such claims must always be measured against the strict moral limits that govern the use of force. Regardless of legitimacy, violence always wounds the human family and leaves lasting scars upon the conscience of mankind.
When violence expands conflict rather than containing it, and when civilian suffering multiplies rather than diminishes, serious questions arise as to whether the strict moral limits governing the use of force are being honored. For this reason we call upon all leaders and parties involved to halt further escalation and to return in good faith to diplomatic engagement. The path of negotiation may be difficult, but it remains the only path that preserves life and prevents further tragedy. Yet, both sides must be willing to talk and listen, continuing the work that was already in process. Negotiation by its very nature cannot be a one-sided dictation.
And we must remember that negotiation is not weakness. It is the difficult work of true statesmanship when the alternative is the continued loss of innocent life. May God grant wisdom to those who hold worldly power, comfort to those who mourn, and peace to a world too often wounded by violence.
