I haven’t heard that. However, with all due respect to the Holy Father, if he did say that, I would have to question his authority on the matter. Not every word he speaks carries the weight of being infallible. I do know that the Church does not make a habit of engaging in the politics of other countries. I served for 10+ years in the US Army as an MP (during several conflicts) and I never encountered an issue over whether or not I was violating my conscience or Catholic teaching.
If you have come to realize that you are violating your well-informed conscience, then by all means either resign your commission or do not reenlist. But I’d suggest that you hold off on trying to suggest that a “person of faith” should not serve. Many of us have and do and I’m at peace knowing neither that God nor the Church see my service as sinful.
I have not yet expressed my opinion, which is that some avocations are honorable under any circumstances. So, I have formed my life around a career which I think brings good into the world, whether it is practiced on Wall Street, in a slum, or on the battlefield.
As for the problem that a warrior faces, I don’t see it as a trivial one. Our politicians are corrupt. Acting for the commonwealth, if it ever existed, has been replaced by acting for personal wealth and accumulation of power in national politics. We are sold the reasons of justice when we go to war, and then we find out later the real reasons. I certainly swallowed the bait with OIF1. This has been a refrain of modern US warfare, that perhaps 50% of our invasions are “unjust”. I am not referring to ongoing peacekeeping missions. And, there have been notable “just” actions, Desert Storm would be the largest most recent, “just” action. The orders to withdraw from Tora Bora bring one to question why we really went into Afghanistan the first time under President Bush. If not for that little detail of abandoning the mission at the critical moment, that would have been a “just” action.
Others may have more faith in our civilian leaders than I do, and their consciences may be clear to fight wherever they are sent. If our nation were attacked, or there were some other clearly “just” cause, I would not hesitate to pick up a weapon. The problem for my conscience is that signing up for a combat job means that I would agree to kill and destroy property, regardless of the justice of the cause. In my opinion, history has shown those causes to be just about 1/2 of the time.
My personal military experience has been similar to yours, in that I never felt that I was violating my conscience, at the time of action. But in retrospect, I did kill people, turn buildings, and in one case participate in turning most of a town into rubble. At the start of OIF, we seemed to have a just mission. By the end of my involvement in it, it was common knowledge that the original reasons had not been carefully considered, which explains why the Pentagon brass was utterly shocked when told to draw up the invasion plan, and why General Powell was a strident voice of opposition on the Cabinet. They were privy to the same intel as the Administration.
Interestingly, on the heels of all of the revelations about how we went to war, there has been a lot of talk in professional journals about what the duty of an officer is to the civilian public. On one side is the traditional view, that military officers should not get involved in politics, and on the other are the younger officers, led by a shining star out of Westpoint, who are expressing the opinion that General Shinseki’s statements were his moral duty to bring to public attention. Just as enlisted Marines have become better killers with less remorse than previous generations, they have also become more discriminating and more willing to sacrifice themselves. This same ethos may be a characteristic of the lower grade officers coming up the ranks, as well.
I am curious as to why you would question JP II’s authority to lend his moral opinion on the invasion of Iraq?