Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

China hands over underwater drone to US Navy ship

- By Gillian Wong

BEIJING — China on Tuesday handed back to the United States an underwater drone it had seized last week in an incident that raised tensions in a relationsh­ip that has been tested by President-elect Donald Trump’s signals of a tougher policy toward Beijing.

Trump has riled the Chinese leadership by saying he might reconsider U.S. policy toward Taiwan, the selfruled island the mainland claims as its territory.

The Chinese navy vessel that seized the drone returned it near where it was seized, and it was received by the guided missile destroyer USS Mustin about 50 miles northwest of Subic Bay in the Philippine­s, Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said in a statement. Cook said Washington considered the seizure illegal.

“This incident was inconsiste­nt with both internatio­nal law and standards of profession­alism for conduct between navies at sea,” he said, adding that the U.S. has called on China to refrain from “further efforts to impede lawful U.S. activities.”

The statement said the U.S. would continue to “fly, sail and operate in the South China Sea wherever internatio­nal law allows.” Such freedom of navigation missions in which U.S. ships sail near China’s artificial islands draw warnings and rebukes from Beijing.

A spokeswoma­n of China’s Foreign Ministry said there was no basis for the Pentagon’s assertion that the seizure was unlawful, though she didn’t fully explain the position, instead linking it to U.S. military presence in the waters, which Beijing considers provocativ­e.

“We have been pointing out that over a long time, the U.S. has been sending aircraft and vessels to conduct close-in reconnaiss­ance and military surveys in waters facing China, which poses threats to China’s sovereignt­y and security,” said Hua Chunying, the spokeswoma­n.

“That is the root cause of the incident,” she said, while calling for the U.S. to stop such activities.

China’s defense ministry said in a statement that it handed the drone back after “friendly consultati­ons.”

Chinese officials say the drone was removed from the water to ensure the safety of passing ships, but domestic political experts have read the move as a warning to Trump not to test Beijing’s resolve over Taiwan.

Early this month, Trump broke protocol by speaking with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen. He later said he did not feel “bound by a one-China policy” unless the U.S. could gain trade or other benefits from China. Beijing regards any acknowledg­ment that Taiwan has its own head of state as a grave insult.

“This incident was inconsiste­nt with both internatio­nal law and standards of profession­alism for conduct between navies at sea.” Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook

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