Vatican's careful words on Pope-Rubio meeting imply deep Trump tensions

Vatican says two leaders 'renewed the shared commitment to fostering good bilateral relations'

Pope Leo XIV leads a holy Mass in Piazza Bartolo Longo in front of the Shrine of the Virgin of the Rosary of Pompeii, on the first anniversary of his election, in Pompei, Italy, May 8, 2026. PHOTO: REUTERS

A Vatican statement after Pope Leo's meeting with United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio, which said the two had pledged to improve bilateral relations, ​was a recognition of unprecedented tensions, insiders and analysts said.

Rubio's meeting on Thursday with Leo, the first US pope, garnered wide ‌public attention as President Donald Trump has repeatedly attacked the pontiff over the US-Iran war.

The Vatican statement after the 45-minute encounter, the first between the pope and a Trump cabinet official in nearly a year, said two leaders had "renewed the shared commitment to fostering good bilateral relations".

"[The] statement makes it clear that, at present, there is work to do," Peter ​Martin, a former diplomat at the US Embassy to the Holy See who served during Democratic and Republican administrations, told Reuters.

Break with tradition of saying all is well

Austen Ivereigh, a Vatican specialist who co-wrote a book with the late Pope Francis, said ⁠the statement's focus on the need to build bilateral relations suggests "that they are at the moment not good".

The US embassy to the Holy See said ​on X after the meeting that Leo and Rubio had discussed "topics of mutual interest in the Western Hemisphere".

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