EDINBURGH - 11 April 2006 - 380 words
Scottish Bishops issue statement on Trident
Following the meeting last week of the Bishops' Conference of Scotland, the following statement on the Trident Nuclear Weapons System was agreed by Scotland's eight Catholic Bishops and issued this morning.
The Bishops of Scotland welcome the Prime Minister's recent comment
that there should be the "fullest possible" public debate
on the Trident nuclear missile system. The Catholic Church has
clear and consistent teaching on nuclear weapons. The use of weapons
of mass destruction would be a crime against God and against humanity
it must never happen.
The Church teaches that it is immoral
to use weapons of mass destruction in an act of war: "Any
act of war aimed indiscriminately at the destruction of entire
cities or extensive areas along with their population is a crime
against God and man himself. It merits unequivocal and unhesitating
condemnation." (1)
Equally, storing and accumulating such weapons gives rise to strong
moral reservations. "The arms race does not ensure peace.
Far from eliminating the causes of war, it risks aggravating them.
" (2)
In a widely endorsed statement released in 1982, the Bishops
of Scotland said: "We are convinced, however, that if it
is immoral to use these weapons it is also immoral to threaten
their use. Some argue that the threat can be justified as the
lesser of two evils. The crux of the problem is whether in any
foreseeable circumstances a policy of self-defence based on the
use or even the threat of use of these weapons of terrible destructiveness
can ever be morally justified."
In January of this year, Pope Benedict XVI stated clearly, "In
a nuclear war there would be no victors, only victims."
He called on those countries in possession of nuclear weapons
to "strive for a progressive and concerted nuclear disarmament."
In repeating our previous statement, and endorsing the statements
from the Pope, we urge the Government of the United Kingdom not
to invest in a replacement for the Trident system and to begin
the process of decommissioning these weapons with the intention
of diverting the sums spent on nuclear weaponry to programs of
aid and development.
(1) VATICAN II, Gaudium et
Spes 80; cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church 2314
(2) Catechism of the Catholic Church 2315
Source: Catholic Media Office
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