The Trump and Leo chronicles: A president and a pope square off over Iran and its aftermath

Pope Leo XIV, a studious and soft-spoken cleric, and Donald Trump, an unapologetically bellicose and pugilistic politician, have long been on a rhetorical collision course. Now their disagreement over the war in Iran has escalated in spectacular fashion, and their comments show how differently each see the conflict and its impact.

Associated Press Pope Leo XIV arrives at Algiers' Houari Boumédiène International Airport on Monday, April 13, 2026, at the start of an 11-day apostolic journey to Africa. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) President Donald Trump arrives on Air Force One, Wednesday, March 18, 2026, at Joint Base Andrews, Md., after attending the casualty return at Dover Air Force Base, Del., for the six crew members of an Air Force refueling aircraft who died when their plane crashed in western Iraq while supporting operations against Iran. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

Algeria Africa Pope

Onsocial media,Trump said Leo was “Weak” and captive to the “Radical Left,” even suggesting that Leo somehow owed his position to Trump. The pope has declared Trump’s threats toward Iran “truly unacceptable" and pointed his flock to Biblical text and church doctrine on war and peace, explaining that his purpose is not about Trump at all.

“I’m not afraid of the Trump administration,” Leo said Monday on the way to Africa, “or of speaking out loudly about the message of the Gospel, which is what the Church works for.”

It's an unusual spectacle involving the world's two biggest megaphones, both held byAmericansfor the first time. Here is how they got to this point.

Before the papacy, Robert Prevost did not mince words

WHAT HE SAID: When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, the future pope was a bishop in Peru. He did not shy away from assigning clear blame to Moscow. On a Peruvian show “Weekly Expression,” Prevost described an “imperialist invasion in which Russia wants to conquer territory for reasons of power given Ukraine’s strategic location.”

The clip resurfaced in Italian media soon after he was elected pope on May 8, 2025.

In early 2025, then-Cardinal Prevost used social media toshare a news analysesthat criticized U.S. Vice President JD Vance, a converted Catholic, for justifying harsh immigration policy by arguing that Christianity sets a pecking order of caring for others, putting one's family, immediate community and fellow citizens above foreigners.

“JD Vance is wrong: Jesus doesn’t ask us to rank our love for others,” read the headline that the future pope shared.

CONTEXT AND WHY IT MATTERS: Catholic bishops comment often in their local media, and some achieve considerable influence. But they vary widely in how detailed they are about public policy and politics. Many stick to broad statements about church doctrine and values and avoid taking stands at odds with individual politicians. With his comments in Peru and then his rare retweet as a cardinal in Rome, Prevost showed he kept abreast of world affairs and was willing to be quite direct in his critiques.

Trump celebrated the ‘Great Honor’ of Pope Leo's election

WHAT HE SAID: “Congratulations to Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, who was just named Pope,” Trump posted on Truth Social on May 8, 2025. “It is such an honor to realize that he is the first American Pope. What excitement, and what a Great Honor for our Country. I look forward to meeting Pope Leo XIV. It will be a very meaningful moment!”

Trump later said at the White House that “we were a little bit surprised and very happy” with Leo's election.

By Monday, he was using Truth Social to take credit for Leo's election: “He wasn’t on any list to be Pope, and was only put there by the Church because he was an American, and they thought that would be the best way to deal with President Donald J. Trump.”

WHY IT MATTERS: Trump sees Leo in terms of nationalistic pride and loyalty. The immediate look toward meeting Leo (something that still hasn't happened) reflected his typical embrace of power and celebrity, even when it isn't a natural political fit. Further, Trump's takes do not reflect any nuance about Leo's origins or the Vatican's relationship with the U.S.

The College of Cardinals historically has viewed the U.S. with some skepticism — specifically because of how Washington's military and economic policy have affected the world, especially poor nations, and with a general reluctance to grant the papacy to someone from the world's preeminent superpower.

Leo grew up, was educated and then ordained in the States but spent decades as a church leader elsewhere, including in poor areas of South America. “He was the least American of the Americans,” said Steven Millies, a professor at Chicago's Catholic Theological Union, where a young Leo earned his master of divinity.

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From the start, Pope Leo reflected church teachings on war and peace

WHAT HE SAID: “Peace with you all ... the first greeting of the risen Christ, the Good Shepherd who gave his life for the flock of God.”

Those were Leo's first words from the balcony of St. Peters. When he returned to the loggia forhis first Sunday blessing, he addressed the Russian war on Ukraine and violence between Israel and Gaza, decrying a “third world war in pieces.” The following Monday, Leo opened an audience with journalists by quoting Jesus. “In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus proclaimed: ‘Blessed are the peacemakers,’" the pontiff said.

WHY IT MATTERS: Leo's earliest statements all emphasized “peace" as a central message of Jesus — and previewed a likely theme of his papacy. Adding mentions of Ukraine, Russia, Israel and Palestine affirmed his willingness to go beyond theory and apply doctrine to what's happening to people around the world.

The pope was careful about any US branding

WHAT HE SAID: Just as important as the words of his opening papal statements on peace were the languages the polyglot Leo used: None of them were English.

At his introduction to the world from St. Peter's Square, Leo opened in Italian and then used Spanish to address Peruvian Catholics and citizens where he'd served. Leo's Sunday blessing was in Italian. He briefly greeted the journalist assembly in English, with the obvious inflection of a Chicago native, but then quickly transitioned to Italian for his remarks. Even in recent encounters with reporters, Leo has opened in Italian before then answering in English.

WHY IT MATTERS: Latin and Italian are the official languages of the Vatican so it's no surprise that Leo speaks the local vernacular. But it's a conscious choice for the polyglot Leo to use his fluent Italian and Spanish. It underscores that he's the leader of a global institution with 1.4 billion followers.

“He doesn’t want to be perceived, I think, as coming from the American side or as relying on his authority as American,” said Catholic University professor William Barbieri. “He wants to speak in the name of the church.”

Holy Week and Easter revealed a chasm

WHAT THEY SAID: Trump escalated threats to Iran around Easter, when Christians celebrate the story of Jesus' resurrection. Leo usedhis Palm Sunday messageto call Jesus the “King of Peace” and say God “does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them, saying: ‘Even though you make many prayers, I will not listen: your hands are full of blood.’”

Trump welcomed conservative religious leaders to the White House for a Holy Week observance. His spiritual adviser Paula White compared the president to Jesus, saying they're both persecuted figures who endured.

In Rome, Leo washed the feet of others, as the story of the Last Supper records Jesus doing for his disciples. Speaking to reporters, Leo named Trump directly for the first time and said he hoped the president would seek an “off-ramp” in Iran. On Easter, Trump threatened widespread bombing of Iran's civilian infrastructure and eradication of a “whole civilization.” Leo called that threat “truly unacceptable.”

WHY IT MATTERS: Their starkly different viewpoints and personalities, combined with the gravity of the Iran war, finally stripped away any pretense or possibility that Trump and Leo could avoid engaging directly.

Trump is still treating Pope Leo as a domestic political rival

WHAT THEY SAID: In Trump's post Sunday blasting Leo as “weak,” among other things, the president said, “I don’t want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I’m doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE, to do.” He added that Leo should “focus on being a Great Pope, not a Politician.”

Leo, meanwhile, said again that he's not speaking as a politician.

“To put my message on the same plane as what the president has attempted to do here, I think is not understanding what the message of the Gospel is,” Leo told The Associated Press aboard the papal flight to Algeria. “And I’m sorry to hear that but I will continue on what I believe is the mission of the church in the world today.”

WHY IT MATTERS: It’s all a rare exercise for the papacy, whose occupants often comment on global affairs without specifically naming secular politicians. And while Trump routinely lashes out at anyone he perceives as an enemy, these dynamics are uncommon for the president, too: This time, Trump is picking a fight with someone who does not accept the president's terms and faces no measurable political pressure to do so.

The Trump and Leo chronicles: A president and a pope square off over Iran and its aftermath

Pope Leo XIV, a studious and soft-spoken cleric, and Donald Trump, an unapologetically bellicose and pugilistic politician, have long b...
'SNL' cold open spoofs Melania Trump's 'big, random' Epstein speech

"Saturday Night Live" is taking onfirst lady Melania Trump's "big, random" Epstein speech.

USA TODAY

The show kicked off its April 11 episode with a sketch covering an eventful week of news, withJames Austin JohnsonplayingPresident Donald Trumpand making a series of phone calls in the Oval Office. One of the calls was with his wife, whothis week held an unusual press eventwhereshe denied having any knowledge of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's abuse.

In the sketch,Melania Trump(Chloe Fineman) said she "decided I should do a big, random speech, completely out of nowhere," about Epstein, only for the president to tell her that this "sounds a little insane." He asked, "Who are you, me?"

"It's not just Epstein," she said. "I thought I could also say, 'I, Melania Trump, in no way helped out the Gilgo Beach serial killer.' That way, no one is suspicious."

Despite Trump pointing out this would only increase suspicion, the first lady suggested in the sketch she should also announce that she "barely partied with Diddy."

Johnson's Trump also calledTiger Woods(Kenan Thompson), telling the golfer, "If only there were something I could have done to help" after Woods'recent DUI, and Defense SecretaryPete Hegseth(Colin Jost). Hegseth assured Trump that Iran is "as obliterated as me every Saturday night, allegedly," adding, "You also probably heard that I want to start a draft again, which is a great sign for the ceasefire."

But Trump told Hegseth he had employed a secret weapon by sending Vice PresidentJD Vancein to help with negotiations. "After those Iranians spent 20 hours talking to JD, they said, 'Please, sir, just go back to bombing us.' "

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The rest of the 'SNL' season:The show reveals schedule of hosts, musical guests

Chloe Fineman as Melania Trump and James Austin Johnson as President Donald Trump on "Saturday Night Live" on Nov. 1, 2025.

The sketchalso featured Trump dictatinghis controversial Easter Sunday post about Iran, which ended with "Praise be to Allah." In the cold open, Johnson's Trump called this a "sarcastic attack on the world's largest religion. They famously have a great sense of humor about that kind of stuff."

The sketch was a return to the show's usual format of opening with a Trump-focused sketch. "SNL" took a break from the president last week, kicking the show offwith a cold open depictingNCAA Final Four post-game coverage. Johnson's Trump character wasn't featured, though the sketch still did get political with an appearance by the recently firedformer Attorney General Pam Bondi, played by Ashley Padilla.

Colman Domingomade his hosting debut on the April 11 episode with musical guest Anitta. This is the last new "SNL" episode of April, as the show is scheduled to take a few weeks off before returning in early May.

Who's hosting 'SNL' next?

"SNL" will next be hosted on May 2 byOlivia Rodrigo, who is doing double duty as both host and musical guest. It will be Rodrigo's hosting debut, though she has been the musical guest twice before.

The following week,Matt Damonwill return to host for the third time with musical guestNoah Kahanon May 9.Will Ferrellwill then host the "SNL" season finale on May 16 with musical guestPaul McCartney. "SNL" is set to be off for the summer after that, with Season 52 debuting in the fall.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'SNL' cold open mocks Melania Trump's Epstein speech

'SNL' cold open spoofs Melania Trump's 'big, random' Epstein speech

"Saturday Night Live" is taking onfirst lady Melania Trump's "big, random" Epstein speech. The show kicked...
British authorities charge alleged boat pilot in deaths of 4 migrants in the English Channel

LONDON (AP) — A Sudanese man alleged to have piloted a boat connected to thedeaths of four migrants trying to cross the English Channelhas been charged under a new British immigration law, authorities said Saturday.

Associated Press Policemen stand guard after a migrant taxi-boat accident, in Equihen-Plage, northern France, Thursday, April 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois Badias) A young boy runs on the beach after at least four people died while trying to board an inflatable boat for a dangerous sea crossing from northern France to the U.K. in Equihen-Plage, northern France. Thursday, April 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois Badias) A police officer stands guard after a migrant taxi-boat accident, in Equihen-Plage, northern France. Thursday, April 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois Badias)

Migration France Britain

Alnour Mohamed Ali, 27, was charged late Friday with endangering another during a journey by sea to the U.K., the National Crime Agency said.

The new law allows Britain to extend the reach of its criminal jurisdiction to crack down on migrants making the dangerous crossing.

The two men and two women died Thursday in strong currents while trying to board the boat Ali allegedly piloted off the coast of Calais.

French authorities rescued 38 others from the waters. Ali and another 73 migrants then continued on to England, where he was arrested.

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The incident occurred at Equihen Beach in Calais as the migrants tried to wade out to what authorities call a “taxi-boat,” typically a small motorized inflatable that picks up people along large stretches of the northern French coast.

The tactic has become more popular with smugglers as police on the beaches try to thwart crossings by puncturing the rafts that groups of migrants have to inflate and carry to the water.

Under maritime law, French police do not try to stop the boats on the water because it put lives at risk.

Recent days have seen a surge inattempted crossingsand deaths, with 102 people rescued in two operations on Wednesday. Two people died last week in similar circumstances off the coast north of Calais.

Ali, also known as Elnoor Mohamed Ali, is scheduled to appear Saturday in Folkestone Magistrates Court.

British authorities charge alleged boat pilot in deaths of 4 migrants in the English Channel

LONDON (AP) — A Sudanese man alleged to have piloted a boat connected to thedeaths of four migrants trying to cross the English Channel...
Cuba’s Díaz‑Canel says he won’t step down under US pressure

A defiant Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said he won’t step down as Cuba’s president if pressured by U.S. officials during talks between the two countries.

USA TODAY

His remarks were broadcast on April 9 during an interview in Havana with NBC's Meet the Press anchor Kristen Welker.

Pressed by Welker whether he would consider stepping down if the U.S. insisted, Díaz-Canel leaned forward in his seat.

“Would you ask that question of Trump?” he said, adding, “in Cuba, the people who are in leadership positions are not elected by the U.S. government. They don’t have a mandate by the U.S. government.”

Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel raises his fist next to Progressive International's general coordinator, David Adler, during an event at the Cuban Institute for Friendship with the Peoples (ICAP) in Havana, on March 21, 2026.

Díaz-Canel’s comments come in the wake of news that U.S. and Cuban officials have met to discuss future relations between the two longtime Cold War foes. Trump officials have said the initial talk focused on expanding economic ties between the U.S. and Cuba.

When reports of the meeting first surfaced, Rubio stressed that the "status quo" in Cuba is unacceptable but cautioned that change on the island could take time. "It doesn’t have to change all at once," he said. "It doesn’t have to change from one day to the next … But Cuba needs to change. It needs to change dramatically.”

He later hardened his view to say that Cuba can only change if it has new leadership.

“The bottom line is, their economy doesn’t work. It’s a non-functional economy,” Rubio said last month during a White House meeting. “They’re in a lot of trouble, and the people in charge, they don’t know how to fix it, so they have to get new people in charge.”

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From Cuba to Panama: US interventions that shaped Latin America

This file photo shows a group of U.S. sailors from the battleship Connecticut and a gun they captured at Cape Haitien during the U.S. occupation of Haiti in 1915.

More:EXCLUSIVE: Cuba pitches US economic roadmap as Trump pressures Havana

Trump has signaled he wants Cuba to "make a deal," and he is prepared to use Washington's leverage on Cuba, saying of the country that it may face "a friendly takeover. It may not be a friendly takeover."

Díaz-Canel was handpicked by Cuba’s former leader Raúl Castro − the brother of Fidel Castro, who led the 1959 revolution that toppled the Cuban government − as his successor, and is known to firmly adhere to the country’s communist principles.

The U.S.-Cuba talks come as the U.S. has imposed a virtual oil embargo on the island nation, choking off the oil that once arrived from Venezuela and plunging Cuba into an energy crisis. Prolonged blackouts have draped the island and hospitals struggle with providing adequate care.

More:Cubastroika: Inside Trump plan to save Cuba's economy and win control

In the interview, Díaz-Canel signaled he welcomed talks with the U.S. but remained defiant against any conditions.

“We’re interested in engaging in dialogue and discuss any topic without any condition,” he said, “not demanding changes from our political system, just as we’re not demanding changes from the American system.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Cuba’s president rejects US pressure to step aside in

Cuba’s Díaz‑Canel says he won’t step down under US pressure

A defiant Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said he won’t step down as Cuba’s president if pressured by U.S. officials during talks bet...

 

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