crisis. To the extent that the efforts at arms reduction and then of total disarmament are not matched by parallel ethical renewal, they are doomed in advance to failure. “The attempt must be made to put our world aright and to eliminate the spiritual confusion born from a narrow-minded search for interest or privilege or by the defense of ideological claims: this is a task of first priority if we wish to measure any progress in the struggle for disarmament. Otherwise we are condemned to remain at face-saving activities. . . . “In current conditions “deterrence” based on balance, certainly not as an end in itself but as a step on the way toward a progressive disarmament, may still be judged morally acceptable. Nonetheless in order to ensure peace, it is indispensable not to be satisfied with this minimum which is always susceptible to the real danger of explosion.”8
and its 2014 occupation of Crimea. It is no secret that the influence of the true Communist Party—the former KGB—in the Russian government is dominant.9 Terrorism has taken on worldwide and apocalyptic dimensions and is protected by countries that already possess or are on their way to acquiring nuclear weapons. All this makes the considerations of John Paul II in the above-mentioned message to the United Nations even more valid today than they were in the early years of his pontificate.
I. The Role of the United States in Defense of Christian Values
Over the decades, the United States has repeatedly come to the defense of peoples whose freedom or Christian values are threatened. We fought against Hitler’s neo-pagan Nazi regime in Europe, and after that, against Communism in Korea, Vietnam, and Grenada.
Conclusion: Moral Conversion Is the Indispensable Prerequisite for Nuclear Disarmament
H. Morally, Our World Today Is Much Worse than in 1982
Now then, the “ethical crisis” and “spiritual confusion” have only worsened since 1982. The breakdown of moral standards in individuals and the world’s political, cultural, and economic realms, the clerical sexual abuse scandals, the near destruction of the institution of the family everywhere, are leading the world to an ever-greater state of chaos. Communism continues to dominate many countries, including China, Cuba, Vietnam and North Korea; the Russian Federation cannot be trusted, as shown by its 2008 invasion of Georgia
FREE
Yes, I would like to receive a free copy of Fr. Victorino Rodriguez’s Theology of Peace. (B36) Please mail it to:
Mr./Mrs./Miss Address City Phone (
St.
Zip
)
For immediate service, please call (888) 317-5571. MFL20
MNF47
PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY
Book
Without delving into the political reasons or intentions of our nation’s leaders in those conflicts, we must emphasize the generosity with which the American people paid a bloody tribute in defense of Christian values, which in turn obtained from Divine Providence special graces for our country.10 This spirit of generosity is still alive in our people and our Armed Forces in spite of the unprecedented moral crisis sweeping our country. Consequently, the United States can still play this great role of charitable intervention in defense of values without which life is not worth living. If our nuclear arsenal and delivery capabilities are decreased or dismantled, however, the only military force seriously capable of confronting the international “criminals without a conscience,” as Pius XII called them, will be greatly impaired. Only these “criminals” profit from this self-imposed state of weakness.
The American TFP • P.O. Box 341, Hanover, PA 17331 • TFP@TFP.org • www.TFP.org
For America, in the present context, self-defense includes the right to maintain, improve, and expand its nuclear arsenal and delivery capabilities. 5
In grappling with these complex and consequential strategic issues, it is not legitimate for Catholics to ignore their supernatural aspect. As Pope Pius XII observed, “the Christian desire for peace is practical and realistic,” and “the genuine Christian will for peace means strength, not weakness or weary resignation. It is completely one with the will for peace of Eternal and Almighty God.”11 This Divine will was manifested anew to men, and this time by the Mother of God herself, in 1917, at Fatima, Portugal, in apparitions to three little shepherd children. She asked for prayer, penance, and a change of life, in sum, a moral conversion of the world. It is the TFP’s long-held opinion that until the world undergoes this conversion, there are simply no conditions for America to reduce its nuclear arsenal and delivery capabilities. When this moral conversion occurs, it will be the fulfillment of Our Lady’s proThe American Society for the phetic words at Fatima: “Finally, my ImDefense of Tradition, Family and maculate Heart will triumph!” Property (TFP) was founded in 1973 and promotes the perennial December 8, 2019 values of Christian civilization. The American TFP For more information, visit us at
IF YOU WANT
PEACE, PREPARE FOR
WAR:
Why Nuclear Weapons Are Still Needed
T
he wise Roman maxim “Si vis pacem, para bellum”—“If you want peace, prepare for war” still applies today. The prospects for peace in our times have dimmed since the fall of the Berlin Wall thirty long years ago. The reality of war was made patent by the brutal 9/11 attacks and the rise of Islamic terrorism that continues into our days. Rogue regimes like that of Communist North Korea remind us that nuclear missiles are still being developed and aimed at America and its allies. Russia and China maintain substantial nuclear arsenals. Pakistan is vulnerable to Islamist pressure. Iran, the world’s greatest state sponsor of terrorism, is elbowing its way into the nuclear club. In a certain sense, the world is more dangerous than ever. However, the moral licitness for nuclear weapons was questioned by Pope Francis I in Hiroshima, Japan, in late November 2019. He condemned as immoral not only the use of such weapons but their very possession. Moreover, during his press conference on the return flight to Rome, Pope Francis stated that “this must go in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.”1 While a world “free from nuclear weapons” is to be greatly desired, such an ideal cannot be entertained without a moral conversion of all involved. It would be imprudent and wrong to take the course of
WWW.TFP.ORG.
6 MNF47
NOTES:
1. Nicole Winfield/AP, “The Pope Is Planning to Make Nuclear Weapons Immoral in the Catholic Doctrine,” Time, Nov. 27, 2019, https://time. com/5740288/pope-catholicism-nuclear-weapons/. 2. Douglas Roche, O.C., Nuclear Weapons and Morality – An Unequivocal Position (Address to U.S. Catholic Bishops’ Panel ‘Ethics, Policy, and the Proliferation of WMD’), Washington, D.C., Nov. 11, 2005, 10, atwww.gsinstitute.org/mpi/docs/Roche_CatholicBishopsNuclearWeapons.pdf. 3. “A people threatened with an unjust aggression, or already its victim, may not remain passively indifferent, if it would think and act as befits Christians.” Pius XII, “Christmas Message of 1948,” Vincent A Yzermans, ed., The Major Addresses of Pope Pius XII (St. Paul: The North Central Publishing Company, 1961), Vol. 2, 124. 4. “In principle, is modern ‘total war’ permissible? Specifically, is ABC [atomic, biological and chemical] warfare permissible? There can be no doubt – especially because of the horrors and the immense suffering resulting from modern warfare – that to initiate it without just cause (in other words, without it being imposed by an evident and extremely grave injustice that cannot be avoided through other means) is a ‘crime’ worthy of the severest national and international sanctions. In principle, one cannot even consider the question of the lawfulness of atomic, chemical and bacteriological war, except in the case when it is indispensable to defense, within the conditions mentioned. Even then, however, one must strive by all means to avoid it through international agreements or by creating limits for its use that are so clear and narrow that its effects are confined to the strict requirements of defense. When this form of warfare entails an extension of harm that completely escapes the control of mankind, its use should be rejected as immoral. Here it would no longer be the ‘defense’ against injustice and the necessary ‘protection’ of legitimate possessions, but purely and simply the annihilation of all human life within range. This is never permitted for any reason.” Pius XII, “Sintesi di verità e di morale espressa alla VII Assemblea Medica Mondiale,” Sept. 30, 1954, in Discorsi e Radiomessaggi, Vol. XVI, 2 Marzo 1954 – 1 Marzo 1955, 169 (our translation from the French original). 5.Antonio Lanza and Pietro Palazzini, Principios de Teologia Moral (Madrid: Ediciones Rialp, 1958), Vol. I, 108 (our translation). 6. Pope Pius XII, “Per il VI Congresso Internazionale di Diritto Penale,” in Discorsi e Radiomessaggi, Vol. XV, 1969, 340 (our translation from the French original and our emphasis). 7. Austin Ramzy, “Don’t Mess With Us,” Time, July 28, 2005, at http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1083955,00.html. 8. Message of His Holiness Pope John Paul II to The General Assembly of The United Nations, June 7, 1982, at http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/ john_paul_ii/speeches/1996/documents/hf_jp-ii_mes_07061982_ gen-assembly-onu_en.html (our emphasis). 9. See Yevgenia Albats, KGB – State Within a State (London-New York: I.B. Taruris Publishers, 1995); Edward Lucas, The New Cold War – Putin’s Russia and the Threat to the West (New York: Palgrave-MacMillan, 2008). 10. The great Catholic thinker Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira often manifested this opinion, which is in line with the Christmas message of Pope Pius XII on Dec. 24, 1948. 11. Pius XII, “Christmas Message of 1948,” Yzermans, ed., The Major Addresses of Pope Pius XII, Vol. 2, 124.
1