Business World

China returns seized US drone at center of diplomatic spat

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BEIJING/HONG KONG — China returned an underwater US drone seized in the South China Sea last week, a move that could diffuse tensions after protests from the White House and critical tweets from president-elect Donald Trump.

The Chinese Ministry of National Defense said in a statement on its official microblog that the unmanned submersibl­e was “smoothly” returned at noon Tuesday in the “relevant waters” of the South China Sea. The handover followed “friendly negotiatio­ns” between the two militaries since the drone’s seizure last Thursday. The condition of the drone was unknown.

A Pentagon spokesman later said the transfer took place near where the vehicle was “unlawfully seized,” about 50 nautical miles northwest of the Philippine­s’ Subic Bay. The unmanned glider had completed a pre- programmed military oceanograp­hic survey route when it was snatched, Pentagon Press Secretary Peter Cook said.

“This incident was inconsiste­nt with both internatio­nal law and standards of profession­alism for conduct between navies at sea,” Mr. Cook said. The US “will continue to fly, sail, and operate in the South China Sea wherever internatio­nal law allows, in the same way that we operate everywhere else around the world.”

‘ LET THEM KEEP IT!’

Mr. Trump lashed out at China over the weekend, saying it stole an underwater drone from the US Navy in an “unpreceden­ted act.” He deleted his first tweet after writing “unpresiden­ted” rather than “unpreceden­ted.” Later, after tensions appeared to ease, Mr. Trump sent another tweet: “We should tell China that we don’t want the drone they stole back — let them keep it!”

China’s defense ministry said it took the drone for safety reasons, while blaming the US’s surveillan­ce activities in the South China Sea — of which China claims almost 90% — for hurting ties.

“The South China Sea appears destined to remain a contentiou­s issue in US- China relations and hence, yet another challenge for the Trump administra­tion in Washington to deal with when it takes office on January 20th,” said Andrew Scobell, a senior political scientist at the RAND Corp.

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