2026-04-16T16:58:15.023Z / 路透社
作者:菲尔·斯图尔特 伊德里斯·阿里
2026年4月16日 格林尼治标准时间下午4:58 更新于3小时前
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2026年4月16日,美国华盛顿五角大楼,美国国防部长皮特·黑格斯瑟在伊朗战争简报会上旁听。路透社/内森·霍华德
- 内容摘要
- 黑格斯瑟为伊朗战争政策辩护,指责媒体对特朗普抱有负面偏见
- 黑格斯瑟发表此番言论后,教皇利奥谴责利用宗教服务政治和军事目的
- 黑格斯瑟与媒体就五角大楼媒体准入政策存在持续法律纠纷
华盛顿4月16日(路透电)——美国国防部长皮特·黑格斯瑟周四援引圣经经文抨击媒体,将记者比作耶稣基督的犹太敌人,称他们正密谋“如何除掉他”。
黑格斯瑟此番言论旨在反驳他眼中针对美以对伊朗战争的负面报道。此番表态也正值总统唐纳德·特朗普与教皇利奥之间的矛盾升级之际——教皇利奥是天主教首位美国籍领袖,同时也是这场战争的批评者。
《路透社伊朗战事简报》新闻邮件将为您及时带来伊朗战事的最新动态与分析。点击此处订阅。
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本周,这场矛盾出现新转折:美国总统在社交媒体上发布了耶稣拥抱他的图片,并将自己塑造成耶稣般的人物。
黑格斯瑟的基督教信仰一直是其担任五角大楼负责人期间的关注焦点。他在五角大楼伊朗战事简报会的开场发言中,提及周日的一场布道,谈到法利赛人即便目睹耶稣行神迹,仍想方设法破坏他的形象。
黑格斯瑟称,这些人的心肠变得刚硬,“法利赛人出去,即刻商议怎样对付他,要把他除掉。”
“我在教堂里听道时就在想,我们的媒体就像这些法利赛人,”黑格斯瑟在五角大楼简报室一众记者面前说道,他补充称自己并非指所有记者,仅针对“那些敌视特朗普的老牌媒体”。
“法利赛人 scrutinized every good act in order to find a violation. Only looking for the negative. The hardened hearts of our press are calibrated only to impugn.”
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近几日,黑格斯瑟和特朗普多次使用基督教语言讨论这场战争,二人都将上周日美军一名被困伊朗的飞行员获救一事称为神迹。
上个月,黑格斯瑟在一场祈祷仪式上祈祷,祝愿美军能够对“那些不值得怜悯的敌人施以压倒性武力打击”。
历史上,美国总统和历届政府曾多次在战争时期援引基督教信仰。但梅西亚大学历史学教授约翰·菲亚表示,特朗普政府在使用直白、毫不含糊的宗教语言方面独树一帜,他曾就福音派与政治的关联撰写过大量文章。
此举也加剧了与教皇利奥的分歧。五角大楼新闻发布会结束不到一小时,来自芝加哥的教皇利奥在X平台上发文称:“那些为谋取军事、经济和政治利益而操纵宗教及上帝之名,将神圣之物拖入黑暗与污秽之人,有祸了。”
黑格斯瑟经常批评美国媒体,称其对特朗普抱有偏见。
他与媒体就五角大楼的媒体准入政策展开了前所未有的法律斗争,一名联邦法官上月裁定该政策违反美国宪法,五角大楼目前正在就该裁决提起上诉。
菲尔·斯图尔特、伊德里斯·阿里 报道;唐·达夫利、丽莎·舒梅克 编辑
Hegseth invokes Bible to compare reporters to enemies of Jesus
2026-04-16T16:58:15.023Z / Reuters
By Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali
April 16, 2026 4:58 PM UTC Updated 3 hours ago
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U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth looks on during a briefing on the Iran war, at the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 16, 2026. REUTERS/Nathan Howard
- Summary
- Hegseth defends Iran war policy, accuses media of negative bias against Trump
- Pope Leo condemns use of religion for political and military purposes after Hegseth’s remarks
- Hegseth has ongoing legal dispute with media over Pentagon credentialing policy
WASHINGTON, April 16 (Reuters) – U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth cited biblical scripture on Thursday to attack the media, comparing reporters to Jewish adversaries of Jesus Christ plotting “how to destroy him.”
Hegseth’s comments sought to counter what he saw as negative coverage of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran. They also came amid an escalating feud between President Donald Trump and Pope Leo, the first U.S.-born leader of the Catholic Church and a critic of the war.
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That feud took a new turn this week when the U.S. president posted images on social media of Jesus embracing him and Trump himself as a Jesus-like figure.
Hegseth, whose Christianity has become a focus of his tenure as the head of the Pentagon, used his opening remarks at a Pentagon briefing on the Iran war to reflect on a Sunday sermon about how Pharisees sought to undermine Jesus even after watching him perform a miracle.
Their hearts were hardened against Jesus, Hegseth said, and “the Pharisees went out and immediately held counsel against him, how to destroy him.”
“I sat there in church and I thought, our press are just like these Pharisees,” Hegseth said, in front of reporters assembled in the Pentagon briefing room, adding he wasn’t referring to everyone, just “the legacy, Trump-hating press.”
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“The Pharisees scrutinized every good act in order to find a violation. Only looking for the negative. The hardened hearts of our press are calibrated only to impugn.”
In recent days, Hegseth and Trump have repeatedly turned to Christian language to discuss the war, with both calling the Easter Sunday rescue of a downed U.S. airman in Iran a miracle.
Hegseth, at a prayer service last month, prayed for troops to be able to deliver “overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy.”
U.S. presidents and administrations have throughout history invoked the Christian faith in times of war. But the Trump administration has set itself apart in its use of stark, unequivocal religious language, said John Fea, a history professor at Messiah University who has written extensively about evangelicals and politics.
It has also widened a rift with Pope Leo. Less than an hour after the Pentagon’s press conference ended, Leo, who is from Chicago, posted on X: “Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic, and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth.”
Hegseth is a frequent critic of the U.S. media, which he says is biased against Trump.
He has waged an unprecedented legal battle with the media over a credentialing policy at the Pentagon that a federal judge last month ruled violated the U.S. Constitution. The Pentagon is appealing that ruling.
Reporting by Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali; Editing by Don Durfee and Lisa Shumaker
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