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China says US has apologised for confusing it and Taiwan in White House error

'It shows the deficiency in the professionalism on the part of the White House staff in terms of diplomacy,' says one China analyst 

Didi Tang
Beijing
Monday 10 July 2017 16:18 EDT
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It is not the first time China has expressed dismay at the conduct of Donald Trump's White House
It is not the first time China has expressed dismay at the conduct of Donald Trump's White House (Jason Lee/Reuters)

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The United States has apologised for mistakenly describing Chinese President Xi Jinping as the leader of Taiwan, China has said - with Chinese scholars suggesting the error shows a lack of competence in the White House.

Foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said China asked the United States for an explanation of the mistake, and the US said it was a technical error. Washington apologised and corrected the error, Mr Geng said at a daily news briefing.

In a statement issued Saturday about a meeting in Germany between Mr Xi and President Donald Trump, the White House press office described Mr Xi as president of the Republic of China, the formal name for Taiwan. Communist China, led by Mr Xi, is called the People's Republic of China. The issue is particularly sensitive because Beijing insists that Taiwan is part of its territory.

“It is basic knowledge for those working in diplomacy, yet this isolated incident shows how incompetent the White House staff are, how casual they are, and how poorly coordinated they are,” said Shi Yinhong, a professor of international relations at China Renmin University. “It will only make the Chinese people look down upon the American government for it to make such a low-level mistake.”

The gaffe has gone largely unreported in China because the local media have no motivation to mock Mr Trump, Mr Shi said.

Wang Dong, an associate professor in the school of international studies at elite Peking University, said he believes the error was not intentional but still reveals a lack of capacity in Mr Trump's foreign policy team while key positions remain unfilled.

“It shows the deficiency in the professionalism on the part of the White House staff in terms of diplomacy,” Mr Wang said. “The mistake itself may not affect China-U.S. relations, but the White House should draw a lesson from it to improve its work flow. It's a politically sensitive mistake that should not have occurred.”

The mistake occurred in the introduction to the statement and was not in the actual text. By Monday, the White House had altered the statement to read simply “President Xi of China.”

During a 2006 state visit to Washington by then-Chinese President Hu Jintao, a White House announcer said the national anthem of the Republic of China would be played, instead of the People's Republic of China. The correct anthem was used.

Other actions by Mr Trump toward Taiwan have drawn Beijing's ire.

Upending long-standing diplomatic protocol, Mr Trump accepted a congratulatory phone call from Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen in December and questioned the wisdom of the “one-China policy” under which Washington maintains only unofficial relations with Taiwan. Then last month, to Beijing's indignation, his administration approved a $1.4 billion arms sale to Taiwan, which separated from mainland China in 1949 during a civil war.

Almost six months into office, Mr Trump has yet to fill thousands of government positions.

Associated Press

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