The commander of the Swiss Guard at the Vatican has been removed from his post, apparently as a result of Pope Francis’s unease at the security chief’s militaristic style...
...The pope’s apparent discomfort with the gruelling shifts and strict rules of the Swiss Guard, which were enforced by Anrig, has been evident since his election in 2013. Italian press reports said the pontiff wanted to see a less rigid military corp and one that was less obsessed by rules.
Read the rest here.
Now that's the ticket. Because everyone knows that the surest foundation stone for a crack military/security service is lax discipline.
It is perhaps worth noting that assassination, like larceny, is primarily a crime of opportunity. Heads of state and other VIPs who insist on moving about in open cars, without bodyguards or who deliberately keep their security at bay are worse than fools. This is because ordinary people can choose to take foolish risks, and in most cases the danger is primarily or exclusively to them alone. But when you are a pope, president or king you are almost never alone in public. The assassin spraying bullets or setting off a bomb is not going to worry about "collateral damage." In the modern world the opposite is more likely to be the case. If you have a martyr complex, that's fine. But you don't have the right to endanger other people by your actions.
Glad he's not in charge of the Marines.
ReplyDeleteIs it possible to impeach a Pope?
ReplyDeleteNo.
ReplyDeletehttp://remnantnewspaper.com/web/index.php/articles/item/1284-can-the-church-depose-an-heretical-pope
ReplyDeleteYes popes can lose their office.
That article appears to rely almost exclusively on the Pio-Benedictine Code of Canon Law which has not been in effect since 1983.
ReplyDeleteThe man is a good-hearted moron, and I mean that in a completely non-malicious way. He is a sentimental, gushing, huggy-bear and would make a great parish priest, but is in well over his head as Patriarch of an autocephalous Church.
ReplyDeleteI knew it was referring to older law and writings but forgot there is a whole new code these days. I believe it's a traditionalist site so I am unsurprised they aren't jumping into the new Code of Canon Law. It will be interesting to see what the new code says on the subject.
ReplyDeleteInitial digging would suggest that the 1983 Canon Law is silent on the subject of removing the pope from office for heresy. That makes sense seeing as it is an extraordinary situation and requires an extraordinary process. "The Roman see is judged by no one" and all that.
ReplyDeleteI think AG may have nailed it. There are so many things to admire about this Pope's character (along with a few not so admirable traits). But humility and personal sanctity do not necessarily translate into a great Pope (see Celestine V). After more than a century of really solid Popes, with only the lack luster Paul VI as an exception, I figure Rome was due for a stinker.
ReplyDeleteIt sucks, but the bottom line as AG noted is that this Pope is in over his depth. And the only thing worse than a well meaning moron in a powerful position, is a liberal well meaning moron.
It's ironic that Benedict XVI emulates (St.) Celestine V, and is then succeeded by, seemingly, a kind of Celestine V redivivus. (Celestine V was, of course, succeeded by Boniface VIII who, whatever his faults and failures, was not out of his depth as pope.)
ReplyDeleteI prefer the rule St. Simeon of Thessalonika who believed that everyone is judged by those who ordained him. Therefore, priests and deacons are judged by their bishop, a bishop is judged by his Metropolitan, a Metropolitan is judged by his Patriarch and the synod, and a Patriarch (or Pope) who holds the highest rank, is judged by a great synod.
ReplyDeleteYou know, if all of this vituperation were on a thread related to the recent synod the family, I could understand. I think that the coverage of that synod was more breathless than it really deserved, but it at least had the potential to do real damage.
ReplyDeleteBut on a thread about sacking the head of the Swiss Guard?!? Honestly, I am not sure that there is any move that one can take vis-a-vis the Swiss Guard that could merit the term "moron."
If I start shooting a gun randomly into the air I can be convicted of murder if someone dies, even if I had no intention of killing anyone at all. On the other hand, no matter how recklessly I flick my tokens while playing tiddly-winks, I am not going to going to be charged with reckless endagerment, because tiddley-winks are just so inherently harmless.
Mutatis mutandis, it is difficult to understand how any action taken with regard to the Swiss Guard can be either "malicious" or "moronic." The Swiss Guard are the tiddly-winks of military forces.
Besides, it is not even as if the Swiss Guard is responsible for Papal security. That is the function of the Gendarmeria del Vaticano. The gendarmes carry guns. The Swiss Guards carry swords and spears. Which one of these two forces do you imagine is more relevant to preventing terrorist attacks that could kill onlookers to papal events?
Wikipedia says the Swiss Guard carries guns:
ReplyDeleteModern arms
Vetterli rifle (Retired from service)
Mauser 98k (Retired from service)
Dreyse M1907 (Retired from service)
Suomi KP/-31 (Retired from service)
SIG MKMS (Retired from service)
Karabiner K31 (Maintained in inventory)
SIG P220 (P75)
Glock 19
Steyr TMP
Heckler & Koch MP5A3
Heckler & Koch MP7A1
SIG SG 550
SIG SG 552
Less-than-lethal weapons
Pepper spray
Tear gas
Fair enough. Wikipedia also notes that it is the gendarmes, not the Swiss Guard, that is responsible for Papal security, so my broader point still stands.
ReplyDeleteso my broader point still stands
ReplyDeleteNo it doesn't. The problem is not the particulars of the Pope's security; the problem is his liberal, modernist disdain for a martial institution with fierce loyalty to the Papal office. +Francis is simply uncomfortable around traditionalist society and its institutions, which is a portent of more change to come.
"Disdain"? Two responses:
ReplyDelete(1) Press coverage of the Catholic Church in English-language secular media is almost always off-the-mark, so it is hard to draw any meaningful conclusions from the linked article in the first place.
(2) If we take the article at face value (which one is ill-advised to do, see #1 above), we know two things. (a) The pope is concerned about the "grueling" shifts the guards are made to work. What exactly does that mean? Who knows (once again, see #1 above)? Nevertheless, a desire to see the rank and file work less grueling hours seems like compassion, not disdain. (b) The dismissed chief, Anrig, has a public link to abuse charges. One can rather understand why a Catholic prelate needs to be careful about the combination of "abuse charges" and "high rank in Vatican." Under the circumstances, it scarcely betokens "disdain" to decide that Anrig was not the best man for the job.