By Gina Christian | OSV News
The leader of the U.S. Catholic bishops has echoed Pope Leo XIV’s call for de-escalation and dialogue in the Middle East, following the joint attacks on Iran launched Feb. 28 by the U.S. and Israel, which killed Iran’s longtime supreme leader, 86-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The attacks prompted a wave of strikes by Iran across the region, with deaths and casualties — including the loss of at least three U.S. military personnel — on all sides.

In a March 1 statement, Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of Oklahoma City, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, warned the “growing conflict risks spiraling into a wider regional war.”
Noting Pope Leo’s plea for peace in his March 1 Angelus remarks — with the pope warning of an “irreparable abyss” if the violence continues to spiral — Archbishop Coakley said, “We are faced with the possibility of a tragedy of immense proportions.
“My brother bishops and I unite our voice with our Holy Father and make the heartfelt appeal to all parties involved for diplomacy to regain its proper role,” Archbishop Coakley said. Quoting the pope’s remarks, he said, “We ask for a halt to the spiral of violence, and a return to multilateral diplomatic engagement that seeks to uphold the ‘well-being of peoples, who yearn for peaceful existence founded on justice.'”
The USCCB president stressed that “all nations, international bodies, and partners committed to peace must exert every effort to prevent further escalation.”
Describing the present moment as “critical,” Archbishop Coakley invited “Catholics and all people of goodwill to continue our ardent prayers for peace in the Middle East, for the safety of our troops and the innocent, that leaders may seek dialogue over destruction, and pursue the common good over the tragedy of war.”
His statement contained a link to a June 2025 appeal for prayer and diplomacy by Bishop A. Elias Zaidan, chair of the USCCB’s Committee on International Justice and Peace, after the U.S. had launched precision strikes on several of Iran’s key nuclear facilities.
In that statement, Bishop Zaidan, head of the Maronite Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of Los Angeles, had urged “multilateral diplomatic engagement for the attainment of a durable peace between Israel and Iran.”
Archbishop Coakley concluded his March 1 statement by imploring “the intercession of our Blessed Mother, Mary, Queen of Peace, to pray for our troubled world and for a lasting peace.”
St. Cloud Bishop Patrick Neary, CSC, endorsed Archbishop Coakley’s statement.
“I gratefully affirm Archbishop Coakley’s recent USCCB statement on the violence unfolding in Iran, which echoes the Church’s unwavering conviction that every human life is sacred and that war is always a tragic failure of the human family,” Bishop Neary said. “His call for restraint, renewed diplomacy and a deeper commitment to peace reflects the heart of our Catholic faith, reminding us that true security is found not in escalating conflict but in pursuing justice, dialogue and the protection of the vulnerable. I join my brother bishops in urging all people of goodwill to pray for those caught in the violence, for leaders entrusted with difficult decisions and for a swift end to the suffering. May Christ, the Prince of Peace, guide our world toward reconciliation and heal the wounds of all who are affected.”
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Gina Christian is a multimedia reporter for OSV News. The Central Minnesota Catholic contributed to this story.
Pictured above: An interception attempt is made by Israel in Tel Aviv March 1, 2026, as missiles are launched from Iran, following Israeli and U.S. strikes on Iran. (OSV News photo/Jamal Awad, Reuters)


















