Pope Francis was wrong to suggest that Kiev should restart negotiations with Moscow, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba has said. The pontiff ruffled feathers in Ukraine this week by speaking about the importance of having “the courage of the white flag.”
“When it comes to the white flag, we know this Vatican’s strategy from the first half of the twentieth century,” Kuleba wrote on X (formerly Twitter), apparently referring to the policy of neutrality pursued by Pope Pius XII during World War II.
Kuleba urged the Vatican to “avoid repeating the mistakes of the past and to support Ukraine and its people.”
“Our flag is a yellow and blue one. This is the flag by which we live, die, and prevail. We shall never raise any other flags,” the minister wrote.
In an interview with Swiss broadcaster RSI published on Saturday, the pontiff suggested that Ukraine and Russia should restart peace talks.
The Pope’s spokesman, Matteo Bruni, later clarified that the term ‘white flag’ was first used by the interviewer, and that Francis had stressed that “negotiations are never a surrender.” Bruni added that the Pope hopes that “a little bit of humanity can be found that allows the creation of the conditions for a diplomatic solution in search of a just and lasting peace.”
Nevertheless, Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky dismissed the pope’s message in a video address on Sunday night. Without mentioning Francis by name, Zelensky said that the church in Ukraine is “together with people, not two and a half thousand kilometers away somewhere, virtually mediating between someone who wants to live and someone who wants to destroy you.”
Some of Kiev’s most vocal backers have also slammed the Pope. “One must not capitulate in face of evil, one must fight it and defeat it, so that the evil raises the white flag and capitulates,” Latvian President Edgars Rinkevics wrote on X.
Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski wrote, “How about, for balance, encouraging Putin to have the courage to withdraw his army from Ukraine?”
Meaningful peace talks between Russia and Ukraine broke down in the spring of 2022, with both sides accusing each other of making unrealistic demands.
Russian President Vladimir Putin subsequently said the Ukrainian delegation had initially agreed with some of Russia’s terms during the talks in Istanbul in March 2022, but then abruptly reneged on the deal.