US Bishops call expiration of nuclear arms pact 'unacceptable'

Archbishop Paul S Coakley
Ahead of the expiration of the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START), the President of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, Archbishop Paul S Coakley, has urged policymakers to "courageously pursue diplomatic negotiations to maintain New START's limits."
"I call on people of faith and all men and women of good will to ardently pray that we, as an international community, may develop the courage to pursue an authentic, transformative, and lasting peace," said Archbishop Coakley. He called on policymakers to pursue diplomatic negotiations, in anticipation of the expiration of the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) on February 5. New START is the last major nuclear arms control pact signed by the United States and Russia.
Archbishop Coakley's full statement follows:
"The dangers posed by current conflicts around the world, including the devastating war in Ukraine, make the forthcoming expiration of New START simply unacceptable. I call on people of faith and all men and women of good will to ardently pray that we, as an international community, may develop the courage to pursue an authentic, transformative, and lasting peace. In his address to the diplomatic corps this year, Pope Leo XIV specified the importance of renewing the pact, saying that there is a 'need to follow-up on the New START Treaty,' and warning that 'there is a danger of returning to the race of producing ever more sophisticated new weapons, also by means of artificial intelligence.' More broadly, in his message for the World Day of Peace, the Holy Father cited St. John XXIII's call for 'integral disarmament' that includes adopting a mindset which realizes that 'true and lasting peace among nations cannot consist in the possession of an equal supply of armaments but only in mutual trust.'
"I call upon policymakers to courageously pursue diplomatic negotiations to maintain New START's limits, opening pathways toward disarmament. International policy disagreements, as serious as they are, cannot be used as excuses for diplomatic stalemates; on the contrary, they should spur us on to more vehemently pursue effective engagement and dialogue. May the Prince of Peace enlighten our hearts and minds to pursue peace around the world in a spirit of universal fraternity."
Archbishop Coakley's comments echo previous statements by the USCCB calling for progress in nuclear disarmament. For more information on USCCB's policy positions on nuclear weapons visit: www.usccb.org/committees/international-justice-and-peace/nuclear-weapons.


















