Pope Leo decries European military spending as ‘betrayal’ of diplomacy

WorldPolitics
14 May 2026 • 7:05 PM MYT
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Image from: Pope Leo decries European military spending as ‘betrayal’ of diplomacy

Pope Leo criticised Europe’s rising military spending, warning that rearmament increases insecurity and undermines diplomacy and peace.

ROME: Pope Leo ⁠on Thursday decried rising European military spending, which grew last year by the highest amount since the end of the ​Cold War amid pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump, saying it ‌was a betrayal of diplomacy.

Leo, who has drawn ​Trump’s ire in recent weeks after criticizing the Iran war, told university students in Rome that they should not refer to such rearmament as defence spending, adding that the world ​was being “maimed by wars”.

“Let us not call ‘defence’ a rearmament that increases tensions and insecurity, ⁠impoverishes ‌investments in ​education and health, betrays trust in diplomacy, and ​enriches elites who care nothing for the common good,” said the ​pontiff.

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Military spending across the continent rose 14% in 2025 to $864 billion, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war and rearmament by European NATO members.

Trump has repeatedly chastised European allies to spend more on arms, ‌and signed an executive order in February that would re-prioritize the customer list for U.S. weapons in favour of countries with higher defence spending.

At Trump’s urging, NATO in 2025 supported a new defence spending target of 5% of GDP for its members.

Leo ⁠has been ‌speaking out against the direction of world leadership in recent weeks. On Thursday, he was addressing students at Rome’s Sapienza University, the largest institution of higher learning in ​Europe.

The pope also warned about the use of artificial intelligence in warfare, citing ​conflicts ​in Ukraine, Gaza, Lebanon and Iran as showing “the inhumane evolution of ‌the relationship between ​war and new technologies in a spiral of annihilation”.

Leo urged the some 110,000 students at the university not to “close themselves within ideologies and national borders”.

“Together with me and with many brothers and ​sisters, be artisans of true peace,” the ​pope pleaded.