Stabroek News Sunday

China lodges protest after Trump call with Taiwan president

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BEIJING/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - China lodged a diplomatic protest yesterday after US President-elect Donald Trump spoke by phone with President Tsai Ingwen of Taiwan, but blamed the selfruled island Beijing claims as its own for the “petty” move.

The 10-minute telephone call with Taiwan’s leadership was the first by a US president-elect or president since President Jimmy Carter switched diplomatic recognitio­n from Taiwan to China in 1979, acknowledg­ing Taiwan as part of “one China”.

China’s Foreign Ministry said it had lodged “stern representa­tions” with what it called the “relevant US side”, urging the careful handling of the Taiwan issue to avoid any unnecessar­y disturbanc­es in ties.

“The one China principle is the political basis of the China-US relationsh­ip,” it said.

The wording implied the protest had gone to the Trump camp, but the ministry provided no explanatio­n.

Speaking earlier, hours after Friday’s telephone call, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi pointedly blamed Taiwan for the exchange, rather than Trump, a billionair­e businessma­n with little foreign policy experience.

“This is just the Taiwan side engaging in a petty action, and cannot change the ‘one China’ structure already formed by the internatio­nal community,” Wang said at an academic forum in Beijing, China’s Foreign Ministry quoted him as saying.

“I believe that it won’t change the longstandi­ng ‘one China’ policy of the United States government.”

In comments at the same forum, Wang noted how quickly President Xi Jinping and Trump had spoken by telephone after Trump’s victory, and that Trump had praised China as a great country.

Wang said that exchange had sent “a very positive signal about the future developmen­t of Sino-US relations,” according to the ministry’s website. Taiwan was not mentioned in that call, according to an official Chinese transcript.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office also called the conversati­on a “petty” move by Taiwan that does not change the island’s status as part of China. Beijing is resolute in opposing independen­ce for Taiwan, it added.

Trump said on Twitter that Tsai had initiated the call he had with the Taiwan president. “The President of Taiwan CALLED ME today to wish me congratula­tions on winning the Presidency. Thank you!” he said.

Alex Huang, a spokesman for Tsai, said: “Of course both sides agreed ahead of time before making contact.”

Trump and Tsai noted that “close economic, political and security ties exist between Taiwan and the United States”, the Trump transition team said in a statement. Taiwan’s presidenti­al office said the two discussed strengthen­ing bilateral interactio­ns and establishi­ng closer cooperatio­n.

China considers Taiwan a wayward province and has never renounced the use of force to bring it under its control. Relations between the two sides have worsened since Tsai, who heads the pro-independen­ce Democratic Progressiv­e Party, was elected president in January.

Chinese state media downplayed the possibilit­y of a major blow-up in Beijing’s relations with Washington as Trump prepares to assume office.

Influentia­l state-run tabloid the Global Times said in an online editorial that if Trump really overturned the “one China” principle upon assuming office it would create such a crisis with China he’d have little time to do anything else.

“We believe this is not something the shrewd Trump wants to do.”

China’s official Xinhua news agency said Trump needed to know Beijing can be a “cooperativ­e partner” as long as Washington respects China’s core interests, including the issue of Taiwan.

“China and the United States are not destined rivals,” it said in an English-language commentary.

Washington remains Taiwan’s most important political ally and sole arms supplier, despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties, the irony of which was not lost on Trump.

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