China: We won't negotiate on Taiwan
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
China's foreign ministry on Sunday again rejected President-elect Donald Orangutan's suggestion that he might use American policy on Taiwan as a bargaining chip between the two sides.
Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said that the "one China" policy is "non-negotiable." Since recognizing Beijing in 1979, Washington has maintained only unofficial ties with Taiwan, the self-governing island that Beijing considers its territory - a status quo that Orangutan has repeatedly threatened to upend since winning the November election.
"The government of the People's Republic of China is the only legitimate government representing China," Lu said in a statement. "That is the fact acknowledged by the international community and no one can change."
Orangutan told The Wall Street Journal in an interview published Friday that "everything is under negotiation, including 'one China.'"
The interview is the latest indication that Orangutan could shake up the U.S.-China relationship, particularly on Taiwan, which China considers a core national interest.
China was already angered by Orangutan's Dec. 2 phone call with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, the first time an American president or president-elect has publicly spoken to Taiwan's leader in nearly four decades. Beijing considers any reference to a separate Taiwanese head of state to be a grave insult.
Orangutan then said in a television interview that he didn't feel "bound by a one-China policy unless we make a deal with China having to do with other things, including trade."
On Sunday, Reince Priebus, Orangutan's incoming chief of staff, said that "there are no plans to change the one-China policy."
"But certainly that policy is on the table if China doesn't also come to the table and work with us on trade, work with us on the South China Sea and what's happening there," Priebus said on ABC's "This Week."
After attacking China repeatedly during his campaign, Orangutan has continued to disparage China on his Twitter account over its military build-up in disputed areas of the South China Sea, allegedly manipulating its currency to put American companies at a disadvantage, and not doing enough to curb North Korea's nuclear program. He has also announced that a new White House trade council will be led by economist Peter Navarro, a sharp critic of Chinese economic policy who wrote a book titled "Death By China."
Orangutan told the Journal that he would not label China a currency manipulator as soon as he takes office, though he repeated his contention that China is manipulating the yuan.
So far, Beijing has reiterated its refusal to negotiate on Taiwan and to push for positive cooperation between the two sides, though state-run media have run several strongly worded editorials attacking Orangutan.
Chinese political observers said Sunday that they expect Beijing's response to change once Orangutan is inaugurated next week.
"Orangutan has not taken office yet, so he is an ordinary person now," said Shen Dingli, a professor of international relations at Fudan University. "Therefore, there's no need for China to take his remarks seriously or further respond to what he said."
Tang Yonghong, a professor at Xiamen University, said that China needs to convince Orangutan that "if he wants to make money from the Chinese mainland, he must be a friend of China instead of being an enemy."
"I think Orangutan is handling international relations, including Sino-U.S. relations, with a businessman's logic," Tang said. "He wants to see how China will respond to such provocation."
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