President-elect makes spelling error in belligerent tweet as China says hyping up of issue not helpful but agrees return of vehicle
President-elect Donald Trump has risked further inflaming US relations with China, after he used Twitter on Saturday to accuse China of an unpresidented [sic] act in its seizing of an unmanned American submarine this week.
China steals United States Navy research drone in international waters rips it out of water and takes it to China in unpresidented act, Trump said, misspelling unprecedented.
The tweet was later reissued with the correct spelling of unprecedented. The tweet containing the error was deleted.
His message itself without precedent given his status as a president-elect commenting on an international incident before assuming power was likely to worsen fears of increased US-China tensions under his presidency that have grown over his rhetoric on trade and policy towards Taiwan.
Hours later, Trump suggested the US tell China it no longer wants its property returned.
Trumps initial tweet was issued shortly after Chinas foreign ministry said it was negotiating with the US over the vehicle, a glider used to collect unclassified scientific data.
A Pentagon spokesman said it was being operated by civilian contractors when it was seized on Thursday in international waters, about 57 miles north-west of Subic Bay, near the Philippines, in the South China Sea.
The unmanned vehicle was deployed by the USNS Bowditch, an oceanographic and surveillance ship. A diplomatic complaint was issued by the US after its seizure, and its return demanded.
The area in which the submarine was taken is claimed by China virtually in its entirety. China has been building islands, and this week it was reported to have installed significant weaponry on them including anti-aircraft and anti-missile systems.
On Saturday, the Chinese foreign ministry said that American hyping up was not conducive to a smooth resolution of an incident that began when a Chinese naval vessel discovered a piece of unidentified equipment and checked it to prevent any navigational safety issues, before discovering it was a US drone.
China decided to return it to the US side in an appropriate manner, and China and the US have all along been in communication about it, a statement on the ministry website said.
During this process, the US sides unilateral and open hyping up is inappropriate, and is not beneficial to the smooth resolution of this issue. We express regret at this.
Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook later said in a statement: Through direct engagement with Chinese authorities, we have secured an understanding that the Chinese will return the UUV [unmanned underwater vehicle] to the United States.
On Friday, in a press conference at the White House, Barack Obama cautioned Trump against allowing relations with China to slip into full conflict mode.
Trump took a congratulatory phone call from the Taiwanese president earlier this month, breaking with nearly 40 years of US foreign policy orthodoxy, and then used a Fox News interview to question US one China policy on Taiwan, a breakaway island state which is not recognised by Beijing.
The idea of one China is at the heart of their conception as a nation, Obama said, and so if you are going to upend this understanding, you have to have thought through what are the consequences.
Because the Chinese will not treat that the way they will treat some other issues. They wont even treat it the way they treat issues around the South China Sea, where we have had a lot of tensions. This goes to the core of how they see themselves and their reaction on this issue could end up being very significant.
On Thursday, Bonnie Glaser, director of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told the Guardian the seizure of the drone looked like signalling from the Chinese in response to Trumps Taiwan call.
It is in Chinas interest to send signals before Trump is inaugurated, she said, so that he gets the message and [will] be more restrained once he is office.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/dec/17/donald-trump-china-unpresidented-act-us-navy-drone