Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump’s calls rattle diplomats

Series of talks with world leaders takes experts ‘by surprise’

- By Tracy Wilkinson Los Angeles Times’ Christi Parsons contribute­d. tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — He praises enemies, he ignores allies, he upends decades of policy.

And Donald Trump hasn’t even been sworn in as president.

In a series of telephone calls with foreign leaders apparently eager to congratula­te the presidente­lect, Trump has broken many of the rules that govern delicate matters of internatio­nal relations, leaving State Department diplomats shocked and confused.

The latest was Trump’s decision Friday night to speak to the president of Taiwan, which no U.S. president or president-elect has done in nearly 40 years. The U.S. has no formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan, which China considers a rogue state and part of its national territory.

Already, China has lodged a formal complaint about Trump’s call with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, though given the stakes of relations between the world’s two superpower­s, it tempered its reaction by emphasizin­g that Trump was not yet setting U.S. policy.

“The one-China policy” that does not recognize an independen­t Taiwan “is the cornerston­e of the healthy developmen­t of China-U.S. relations, and we hope this political foundation will not be interfered with or damaged,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said Saturday, blaming Tsai for playing a “small trick” on Trump.

The conversati­on had several of the hallmarks of Trump’s most notable discussion­s with foreign leaders since being elected: unorthodox, out of step with current U.S policy and prompted by opaque motives.

“We’ve been taken by surprise at every turn,” one baffled national security staffer said of the calls to foreign leaders.

Trump offered no apologies, nor did his transition team make any comments. Instead, he defended the discussion amid reams of criticism for having broken U.S. protocol by saying Tsai initiated it.

“The President of Taiwan CALLED ME today to wish me congratula­tions on winning the Presidency. Thank you!” Trump tweeted.

Later, Trump added: “Interestin­g how the US sells Taiwan billions of dollars of military equipment but I should not accept a congratula­tory call.”

Under the Obama administra­tion, the U.S. has sold $14 billion in weapons to Taiwan. The administra­tion’s Asia policy has centered on an effort to rebalance military and diplomatic resources toward the continent to counter the growing influence of China, though it has had limited success.

China was also one of Trump’s frequent targets during the campaign, and the call could have been a first salvo in changing U.S. policy under the Trump administra­tion. He wants to increase tariffs on China, has threatened to label the country a currency manipulato­r and blames it in part for the loss of jobs in the U.S.

But the sudden nature of the call with Tsai, without informing other interested parties such as China or the White House, unsettled foreign policy experts.

Trump’s propensity to make and receive phone calls “heightens concerns about Trump’s foreign policy deftness,” said Jeffrey Bader, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n.

“There are serious risks posed by his failure to take briefings by government profession­als,” Bader wrote in a blog post, “and he appears to have little respect for the potential damage of actions taken without understand­ing long-standing U.S. national security concerns.”

Trump’s call with Tsai also prompted concern because his business empire is hoping to build in Taiwan.

Trump has said he’ll step aside from businesses during his presidency.

Beyond the conflicts of interest, however, Trump is ignoring U.S. policy.

In a telephone conversati­on with Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Trump said Pakistanis were “exceptiona­l people” and “one of the most intelligen­t people.”

The overtures belied Trump’s attacks during the campaign on Pakistan as an evil sponsor of terrorism.

“You are a terrific guy,” Trump told Sharif, whom the U.S. regards as corrupt. “You are doing amazing work which is visible in every way.”

The U.S. has diplomatic relations with Pakistan, but considers India, Pakistan’s arch-enemy, as a closer friend. Indians were shocked by Trump’s blithely friendly tone with Sharif.

Trump has declined to receive most of the intelligen­ce briefings he is entitled to as president-elect.

Trump does get informatio­n from the State Department, briefing books and other sources, senior adviser Kellyanne Conway told CNN after his phone call with Tsai.

The current administra­tion has scrambled to emphasize that Trump’s conversati­on with Tsai does not signal any change to longstandi­ng U.S. policy, said Ned Price, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council.

 ?? OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT OF TAIWAN ?? Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen speaks with President-elect Donald Trump on Friday.
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT OF TAIWAN Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen speaks with President-elect Donald Trump on Friday.
 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? State Department diplomats are shocked after Donald Trump’s telephone calls with foreign leaders last week.
EVAN VUCCI/AP State Department diplomats are shocked after Donald Trump’s telephone calls with foreign leaders last week.
 ?? XINHUA/TNS ?? Trump told Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif that he was a “terrific guy.”
XINHUA/TNS Trump told Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif that he was a “terrific guy.”
 ?? RICHARD MADELO/PRESIDENTI­AL PHOTOGRAPH­ERS’ DIVISION ?? Philippine­s’ President Rodrigo Duterte speaks with Trump last week.
RICHARD MADELO/PRESIDENTI­AL PHOTOGRAPH­ERS’ DIVISION Philippine­s’ President Rodrigo Duterte speaks with Trump last week.

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