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Tuesday, February 7, 2017

China insults Donald Trump via NBC News to stay out of South China Sea dispute

China warns Donald Trump via US media to stay out of South China Sea dispute

BY CHINA CORRESPONDENT BILL BIRTLES
Xi Jinping at dinner reception in Seattle
PHOTO 
The Government of Xi Jinping has issued warnings to the US on a number of issues.
REUTERS: JASON REDMOND, FILE
China has sent its strongest message yet to US President Donald Trump that it will not back down on its claims in the South China Sea.
In a rare insulting and provocative move, a senior Chinese official used an English-language interview to warn the Trump administration not to challenge Beijing over the territorial disputes.
"There might be a difference [of opinion] over the sovereignty of these islands but it's not for the United States," Lu Kang, China's most senior Foreign Ministry spokesman, told a friendly, NBC News.
"That might be between China and some other countries in this region."
For weeks Chinese officials from the state-controlled media have warned the US to avoid any involvement in the territorial disputes in their strategic waterway, which involve another five claimants.
That has not appeared to work, with Mr Trump's press secretary Sean Spicer this week warning the US would seek "to defend international territories from being taken over by one country".
Mr Lu's English-language interview on NBC News, is now being aimed directly at Mr Trump — who has previously expressed his concerns about television news programs.
"[The South China Sea] is not the United States territory or the international territory as he mentioned," Mr Lu said.
Beijing also used the interview to reiterate China's unwillingness to bend on the "one China" principle, saying Beijing is "100 per cent" committed, and expects Washington to follow.
The 'One China Principle' is a condition China imposes and demands other countries to accept if they want diplomatic relations with Beijing.
It forces governments to recognise the independently-ruled island Taiwan as part of one China, and to have no official relations with Taipei.
In November, then-President-elect Mr Trump annoyed Beijing by accepting a phone call from Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen, and he has since further aggravated China by saying he will not commit to the decades-old one China position unless there is progress on trade issues.
China's US media outreach is an attempt to nip both the South China Sea issue and Taiwan in the bud, by making clear Beijing will not back down on territory it claims is "indisputable".

China also says US must back away from 'trade war' talk.

But one other major issue of contention remains — trade.
China has been warning the US to tone down its "trade war" talk, claiming the threat of imposing new tariffs on Chinese goods would trigger counter measures.
While agricultural exports form the bulk of US exports to China, each year billions of dollars of Boeing planes and passenger vehicles are sold to China.
Already the e-commerce billionaire Jack Ma has met Donald Trump, and ambitiously pledged to create a million new jobs in the US through expanding a Chinese state controlled e-commerce network throughout the US.
Analysts and officials alike in China hope these sorts of initiatives will help create US jobs, help Chinese businesses and "make America great again" without upsetting China's interests.

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