Pope Leo XIV arrived in Turkey on Thursday on his first foreign trip, fulfilling Pope Francis’ plans to mark an important Christian anniversary and bring a message of peace to the region at a crucial time in efforts to end the war in Ukraine and ease Mideast tensions.
Leo was welcomed on the tarmac of Ankara's Esenboga Airport by a military guard of honor.
Strolling along a turquoise carpet, he shook hands with Culture and Tourism Minister Mehmet Nuri Ersoy, other officials and senior church figures from Turkey.
Later, he had a meeting planned with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and a speech to the country’s diplomatic corps.
He’ll then move late Thursday on to Istanbul for three days of ecumenical and interfaith meetings that will be followed by the Lebanese leg of his trip.
Leo’s visit comes as Turkey, a country of more than 85 million people of predominantly Sunni Muslims, has cast itself as a key intermediary in peace negotiations for the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza.
Ankara has hosted rounds of low-level talks between Russia and Ukraine and has offered to take part in the stabilization force in Gaza to help uphold the fragile ceasefire, engagements Leo may applaud in his arrival speech.
AP video shot by: Mehmet Guzel

Associated Press US and World News Video
Post Register
Daily Gazette
America News
Associated Press Top News
The Daily Beast
Reuters US Politics
AlterNet
ABC News
Reuters US Top
San Gabriel Valley Tribune
Verywell Health
The List