China rejects Trump claim ‘it stole US research drone’

This undated Navy file photo shows crew members aboard the VOS Raasay recover US and British Royal Navy ocean gliders taking part in the Unmanned Warrior exercise off the northwest coast of Scotland, on October 8, 2016. A similar unmanned underwater vehicle was seized by the Chinese Navy in international waters off the coast of the Philippines on December 15, 2016.  The underwater probe was taken around 50 nautical miles (90 kilometers) northwest off Subic Bay in the Philippines on December 15 in a non-violent incident, Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis said. The event unfolded as the civilian-crewed USNS Bowditch was retrieving a pair of "naval gliders" that routinely collect information on water temperatures, salinity and sea clarity.   / AFP PHOTO / US NAVY / Cmdr Santiago Carrizosa / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / U.S. Navy Photo/ Cmdr. Santiago Carrizosa " - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

 

Beijing / AFP

China on Monday rejected US President-elect Donald Trump’s claim that it had “stolen” an American research drone, as state media said his diplomatic inexperience could spark a confrontation between the two nations.
Beijing’s seizure of the marine probe in international waters in the South China Sea raised already heightened tensions between the world’s two largest military powers.
On Sunday, after Beijing and Washington announced the drone would be returned, Trump tweeted: “We should tell China that we don’t want the drone they stole back. – let them keep it!”
Trump’s accusation that China had stolen the drone was “not accurate”, said foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying. “Imagine that you found something on the street—you would need to first check and verify it before handing it back to someone else,” she told a regular press
conference.
Hua said the two sides “are in smooth communication through military channels, and we believe the incident will be properly handled”. She gave no further details.
The Pentagon said Friday that a Chinese naval vessel “unlawfully” grabbed the unmanned underwater vehicle around 50 nautical miles northwest of Subic Bay in the Philippines.
China said the drone had been snatched since it might pose a safety hazard to other vessels.
It also said it “strongly opposed” US reconnaissance activities and had asked Washington to stop them.
The US said the device was collecting information on water temperatures, salinity and sea clarity.
In an earlier misspelled tweet Saturday, Trump also accused Beijing of theft. “China steals United States Navy research drone in international waters—rips it out of water and takes it to China in unpresidented act,” he wrote. The state-owned China Daily rejected the claim in an editorial.
“What is truly amazing about this tweet, was the soon-to-be US president completely misrepresented what had actually happened—that is more dangerous than funny,” it said.
Trump’s behaviour “could easily drive China-US relations into what Obama portrays as ‘full-conflict mode’,” it added, next to a cartoon that depicted Trump riding a bull into a china shop while US businessmen looked on aghast.
A separate article quoted experts as calling Trump’s behaviour “diplomatically inept”.
Trump has already infuriated Beijing by questioning longstanding US policy on Taiwan, calling Beijing a currency manipulator and threatening punitive tariffs on Chinese imports.

‘Not presidential’
“Trump is not behaving as a president who will become master of the White House in a month. He bears no sense of how to lead a superpower,” the often nationalistic Global Times, which has close ties to the ruling Communist Party, said in an editorial.
There are broader tensions in the South China Sea, where China has moved to fortify its claims to the region by expanding tiny reefs and islets into artificial islands hosting military
facilities.
Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam and Taiwan have competing claims in the waterway.
The Philippines described the latest incident as troubling and said it might require its US ally to inform it about what it called drone movements in Philippine waters.
Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said Manila had been unaware of the presence of the drone, adding the incident increased chances of miscalculations that could lead to “open confrontation”.
“This incident in our Exclusive Economic Zone and very near our territorial waters is very troubling,” Lorenzana said in a statement on Monday. While the US takes no position on sovereignty claims in South China Sea, it has repeatedly stressed freedom of navigation.
Its military has conducted several operations in which ships and planes have passed near the sites Beijing claims.

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