Pope says he hopes Trump-Putin meeting leads to ceasefire in Ukraine

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U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in the Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington Aug. 11, 2025, about deploying federal law enforcement agents in Washington to bolster the local police presence. Trump said that he will place the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department “under direct federal control,” activate the National Guard, and “get rid of the slums” in what he called an effort to combat crime in the nation’s capital. (OSV News photo/Jonathan Ernst, Reuters)

Arriving in Castel Gandolfo, Pope Leo XIV told reporters he hoped US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin can find a way to reach a ceasefire in Russia’s war on Ukraine when they meet in Alaska.

Reporters were in the crowd that waited to welcome the pope back to the papal summer villa 13 August, and a journalist from the Italian agency ANSA asked him what his hopes for the 15 August Trump-Putin meeting were.

“I’m always hoping for a ceasefire,” the pope said. “There must be an end to the violence and so many deaths. Let’s see how they can reach an agreement because the war has been going on too long.”

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Pope Leo said that it is not even clear what the point of the war is, “so one must always seek dialogue, diplomacy and not violence.”

The pope also noted that just a few hours earlier, European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had a video call with Trump.

The Ukrainian national flag flies near Holy Wisdom Cathedral, or St. Sophia Cathedral, in central Kyiv on Feb. 14, 2025, amid Russia’s full-scale war on Ukraine. Up to seven people were killed and up to 13 injured in a large-scale Russian drone attack on Kyiv and Odesa June 10, which also damaged the historic cathedral. (OSV News photo/Thomas Peter, Reuters)

The reporter also asked Pope Leo if he was worried about the humanitarian situation in Gaza as Israel continues its military operations to destroy Hamas, which attacked Israel in October 2023, killing close to 1,200 people and kidnapping hundreds of others.

The pope said he was “very” worried. “It cannot continue like this.”

“We know the violence, the terrorism” of Hamas, he said, and “we respect the many who died and the hostages, who must be released, but there also are many who are dying of hunger.”

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