
For US Cardinal Prevost, road to becoming Pope Leo was paved in Peru
Prevost, a relative unknown on the world stage, spent two decades as a missionary in Peru and became a senior Vatican official and a cardinal only in 2023. His first assignment as a bishop was in Chiclayo, in northwest Peru, where he served from 2015 to 2023.
For the 133 cardinals locked in conclave in the Sistine Chapel to pick a successor to Pope Francis — an Argentine and the first pontiff from the Americas — this was likely no small detail.
"For us, he's the second Latin American pope," Fernando Morales-de la Cruz, a Guatemalan human rights activist, told Reuters. Prevost has dual US–Peruvian nationality.
But unlike Francis, who was elected pope in 2013 after serving for decades as a local bishop and had no Vatican experience, Prevost was not a complete outsider. He spent the last two years leading the powerful Vatican office that helps decide which priests are appointed as Catholic bishops across the world. He also took part in two Vatican assemblies of global bishops hosted by Francis in 2023 and 2024.
With his combined experiences, he becomes pope with a head start on some of the big issues facing the 1.4 billion-member Church and is already well known by many of the cardinals.
Given the secrecy of the conclave, not much will be known — at least for now — about the thinking of the cardinal-electors and how their rounds of voting went up to the moment they made their choice on Thursday.
But some analysts have theories, including about how Prevost overcame what was until now thought to be an unlikely proposition: a US cardinal becoming pope.
"Before the conclave, the American cardinals thought a US passport was a dealbreaker," said Michael Sean Winters, a US commentator who has followed the Vatican closely. But cardinals decided that Prevost's nationality, given his experience in Latin America, "was not an insuperable barrier", he said.
"What they wanted was someone known among the other cardinals and also committed to carrying on with Francis' reforms," said Winters. "And more than any other papal contender, Prevost had both things."
In Donald Trump's second US presidency, the cardinals may have also seen real value — for the first time — in elevating another American as pope. Francis was a sharp critic of Trump, saying earlier this year that the president's plan to deport millions of migrants in the US was a "disgrace".
"As for why the cardinals picked (Prevost), I have to wonder if elevating a 'different sort of American leader' wasn't a part of the discernment process," said Natalia Imperatori-Lee, a US academic and Catholic expert at Manhattan University in New York.
QUICK CONCLAVE
Heading into the conclave on Wednesday, two other cardinals were seen as leading frontrunners: Italian Pietro Parolin and Filipino Luis Antonio Tagle. Cardinals vote in conclaves once on the first day and four times on subsequent days.
When white smoke billowed from a chimney atop the Sistine Chapel at 6.08pm (1608 GMT) on Thursday, signalling the election of the new pope, many watching thought it must be either Parolin or Tagle. The timing of the smoke meant the new pope was probably elected on the fourth ballot of the conclave — a fast result. Francis was elected on the fifth ballot of the 2013 conclave.
In 1978, it took eight ballots to elect Pope John Paul II. Like Prevost, the Polish Cardinal Karol Wojtyla had not been seen as a frontrunner heading into the conclave that made him pontiff.
PREPARED SPEECH
One cardinal — who was not able to participate in this conclave because he is over the age of 80 — said that based on his experience in past conclaves, a consensus probably emerged on the third ballot that on the next round Prevost would reach the two-thirds majority required to win election. The third ballot would have been the second one held on Thursday morning, before the cardinals took a break for lunch.
The retired cardinal, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the secretive process, suggested that Prevost may have taken time in the lunch break to choose his papal name and begin drafting his first address as leader of the Church.
When Pope Leo appeared for the first time on the balcony of St Peter's Basilica, about 70 minutes after his election, to greet tens of thousands in the square below, he spoke from a written text.
None of the past four popes used a written text for their first address from the balcony. In 2013, Francis' first word was simply "Buonasera" (Good evening), and he spoke extemporaneously for just a few minutes.
Asked by a reporter with Italy's Channel 4 two days before the conclave if he would be elected as pope, Prevost replied: "Everything is in the hands of the Holy Spirit." The reporter then mentioned how the cardinal had a range of experiences he could offer as pope — being born in the US, living in Peru, and knowing bishops around the globe because of his Vatican job.
"All of this is true, yes," Prevost replied.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
12 minutes ago
- The Star
South Korean and US militaries begin annual summertime drills to cope with North Korean threats
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - South Korea and the United States began their annual large-scale joint military exercise on Monday to better cope with threats by nuclear-armed North Korea, which has warned the drills would deepen regional tensions and vowed to respond to "any provocation' against its territory. The 11-day Ulchi Freedom Shield, the second of two large-scale exercises held annually in South Korea, after another set in March, will involve 21,000 soldiers, including 18,000 South Koreans, in computer-simulated command post operations and field training. The drills, which the allies describe as defensive, could trigger a response from North Korea, which has long portrayed the allies' exercises as invasion rehearsals and has often used them as a pretext for military demonstrations and weapons tests aimed at advancing its nuclear program. In a statement last week, North Korean Defense Minister No Kwang Chol said the drills show the allies' stance of "military confrontation' with the North and declared that its forces would be ready to counteract "any provocation going beyond the boundary line.' Ulchi Freedom Shield comes at a pivotal moment for South Korea's new liberal President Lee Jae Myung, who is preparing for an Aug. 25 summit with U.S. President Donald Trump in Washington. Trump has raised concerns in Seoul that he may upend the decades-old alliance by demanding higher payments for the American troop presence in South Korea and possibly reducing it as Washington shifts its focus more toward China. Tensions on the Korean Peninsula remain high as North Korea has brushed aside Lee's calls to resume diplomacy with its war-divided rival, with relations having soured in recent years as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un accelerated his weapons program and deepened alignment with Moscow following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Seoul's previous conservative government responded to North Korean threats by expanding military exercises with the United States and seeking stronger U.S. assurances for nuclear deterrence, drawing an angry reaction from Kim, who last year renounced long-term reconciliation goals and rewrote the North's constitution to label the South a permanent enemy. In his latest message to Pyongyang on Friday, Lee, who took office in June, said he would seek to restore a 2018 inter-Korean military agreement designed to reduce border tensions and called for North Korea to respond to the South's efforts to rebuild trust and revive talks. The 2018 military agreement, reached during a brief period of diplomacy between South Korea's former liberal President Moon Jae-in and Kim, created buffer zones on land and sea and no-fly zones above the border to prevent clashes. But South Korea suspended the deal in 2024, citing tensions over North Korea's launches of trash-laden balloons toward the South, and moved to resume frontline military activities and propaganda campaigns. The step came after North Korea had already declared it would no longer abide by the agreement. When asked whether the Lee government's steps to restore the agreement would affect the allies' drills, the South's Defense Ministry said Monday that there are no immediate plans to suspend live-fire training near the Koreas' disputed maritime border. While the allies have postponed half of Ulchi Freedom Shield's originally planned 44 field training programs to September, U.S. military officials denied South Korean media speculation that the scaled-back drills were meant to make room for diplomacy with the North, citing heat concerns and flood damage to some training fields. Dating back to his first term, Trump has regularly called for South Korea to pay more for the 28,500 American troops stationed on its soil. Public comments by senior Trump administration officials, including Undersecretary of Defense Elbridge Colby, have suggested a push to restructure the alliance, which some experts say could potentially affect the size and role of U.S. forces in South Korea. Under this approach, South Korea would take a greater role in countering North Korean threats while U.S. forces focus more on China, possibly leaving Seoul to face reduced benefits but increased costs and risks, experts say. In a recent meeting with reporters, Gen. Xavier Brunson, commander of US Forces Korea, stressed the need to "modernize' the alliance to address the evolving security environment, including North Korea's nuclear ambitions, its deepening alignment with Russia, and what he called Chinese threats to a "free and open Indo-Pacific.' - AP


The Star
12 minutes ago
- The Star
Tanzania court bans live coverage of opposition leader's treason trial
FILE PHOTO: Tanzanian opposition leader and former presidential candidate of CHADEMA party Tundu Lissu is escorted as he walks at the Kisutu Resident Magistrate Court in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania April 10, 2025. REUTERS/Emmanuel Herman/File Photo DAR ES SALAAM (Reuters) -A court in Tanzania on Monday banned the live coverage of treason proceedings against the East African nation's main opposition leader, Tundu Lissu, who criticised the decision. Principal Resident Magistrate Franco Kiswaga said the ban would help protect civilian prosecution witnesses, acceding to a request by the state prosecutor who said it was necessary to conceal their identities. "Live streaming, live broadcast, and any other kind of live distribution of content online to the public including on social media or video broadcast ... are hereby prohibited," Kiswaga ruled during preliminary proceedings on Monday at the Kisutu Resident Magistrate's Court in Dar es Salaam. Lissu had already opposed the request saying that such an order would allow the court to operate in "darkness" and prevent his supporters from following the case. Officials from his CHADEMA party also criticised the court's order. "Justice must be done and be seen to be done," Lissu, who is representing himself after dismissing his attorneys, said last week. Lissu is the leader of Tanzania's biggest opposition party and has been in detention since early April after he was charged with treason and publication of false information. He has rejected the charges. Lissu, who was shot 16 times in a 2017 assassination attempt, was runner-up in the 2020 presidential election but his party has been disqualified from participating in October's presidential and parliamentary votes. His detention and unexplained abductions of government critics in recent months have shone a spotlight on the human rights record of President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who says her government is committed to respecting human rights. Hassan is running for the presidency for the first time after assuming office following the death of her predecessor John Magufuli in 2021. (Editing by Elias Biryabarema, Ammu Kannampilly and Alison Williams)


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Russian general seriously wounded on front line, regional leader says
(Reuters) -General Esedulla Abachev, deputy commander of Russia's Northern group of forces, has been seriously wounded on the front line of the war with Ukraine, a senior official said on Monday. Abachev comes from Russia's Dagestan region, whose leader Sergei Melikov said on Telegram that he was in a serious but stable condition in "one of the best military medical centres in the country". Ukrainian military intelligence said on Sunday that Abachev had an arm and a leg amputated after being wounded in a Ukrainian strike on a Russian military column on a highway in the Kursk region of western Russia, and that he was being treated in Moscow. Reuters could not confirm those details. At least a dozen Russian generals have been killed in the war that started with Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Abachev graduated from the Higher Tank Command School in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv when Ukraine was still part of the Soviet Union, which collapsed in 1991. He received the Gold Star of the Hero of Russia for his role in combat missions during the current war. Dagestani leader Melikov said he was the pride of the region, describing him as "a combat general and a wise commander who always tries to protect his personnel, sometimes neglecting his own safety". (Reporting by Mark Trevelyan in London; Editing by Sharon Singleton)