Don't shut door to dialogue with Islamic State - pope

Pope Francis waves from his car after visiting the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, November 25, 2014. REUTER/Eric Lalmand/Pool

ABOARD PAPAL PLANE (Reuters) - Pope Francis said on Tuesday that while it was "almost impossible" to have a dialogue with Islamic State insurgents, the door should not be shut. "I never say 'all is lost', never. Maybe there can't be a dialogue but you can never shut a door," he told reporters on his plane returning from Strasbourg, France, where he addressed the European Parliament and the Council of Europe. "It is difficult, one could say almost impossible, but the door is always open," he said in response to a question about whether it would be possible to communicate with the militants. Ultra-radical Islamic State has captured thousands of square miles (km) of territory in Iraq and Syria, beheaded or crucified prisoners, massacred non-Sunni Muslim civilians in its path and displaced tens of thousands of people. The Iraqi government, backed by U.S.-led air strikes, has been trying to push back Islamic State, although Shi'ite Muslim militias and Kurdish peshmerga have helped contain the Sunni insurgents and repelled them in some provinces. . Pope Francis repeated comments made earlier this year that while it was legitimate to fight an "unjust aggressor", this had to be supported by an international consensus. (Reporting By Eleanor Biles and Isla Binnie, writing by Philip Pullella, editing by Mark Heinrich)