Pope Says Will Make Iraq Trip Despite Rocket Attack

Pope Francis said Wednesday he still expected to make his historic visit to Iraq in two days time, after a rocket attack on a military base hosting US-led coalition troops.
"The day after tomorrow, God willing, I will go
to Iraq for a three-day pilgrimage. For a long time I have wanted to meet these
people who have suffered so much," the 84-year-old Francis said in his
weekly Wednesday address.
"I ask you to accompany this apostolic journey
with your prayers so that it may take place in the best possible way and bear
the hoped-for fruits," the pope said.
He added: "The Iraqi people
are waiting for us, they were waiting for Saint John Paul II, who was forbidden
to go. One cannot disappoint a people for the second time. Let us pray that
this journey will be successful."
At least 10 rockets slammed into a
military base in western Iraq hosting US-led coalition troops earlier on
Wednesday, security sources said, leaving one civilian contractor dead, AFP
reported.
The attack on the sprawling Ain
al-Assad base in Iraq's western desert comes after several weeks of escalating
US-Iran tensions on Iraqi soil.
On Tuesday, a spokesman for
Francis said the pope would be travelling by armored vehicle and that he would
not be meeting crowds.
"This is a particular situation, that's why the
transports will all be in a closed vehicle, meaning it will be complicated to
see the pope on the streets," spokesman Matteo Brunei said.
"There will be a number of
meetings but none will be more than a few hundred people," he said.