China praises Trump's letter to Xi, belated well-wishes
https://gistzzone.blogspot.com/2017/02/china-praises-trumps-letter-to-xi.html
BEIJING (AP) — China praised U.S. 
President Donald Trump on Thursday for expressing a desire for a 
"constructive relationship" in a letter to Chinese President Xi Jinping,
 even though the leaders have not spoken directly since Trump's 
inauguration.
Trump sent belated well-wishes for the Lunar New Year in a letter from the White House on Wednesday.
He
 had been the only U.S. president in recent years not to have issued 
greetings to the world's most populous nation on its most important 
holiday, which fell this year on Jan. 28. The silence triggered 
speculation in China as to whether it was an oversight or an intentional
 slight.
A
 statement from the White House late Wednesday said Trump wrote to Xi 
that he looked forward to "develop a constructive relationship that 
benefits both the United States and China."
Foreign
 Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said China "highly commended" Trump for the 
letter to Xi wishing the Chinese people greetings for the new year and 
the Lantern Festival that falls on Saturday. Lu dismissed suggestions 
that Beijing took offense in the timing.
"It is known to all that since President Trump took office, China and the U.S. have been in close contact," Lu said.
Speculation
 has simmered in China about how Trump might back up his tough talk, 
with observers noting that since his Jan. 20 inauguration, Trump has 
spoken to more than a dozen foreign leaders but not Xi.
Trump has accused Beijing of unfair trade practices and a deliberately undervalued currency, criticized China's military 
buildup in the South China Sea and accused Beijing of doing too little 
to pressure neighbor North Korea over its nuclear and missile programs.
 and a deliberately undervalued currency, criticized China's military 
buildup in the South China Sea and accused Beijing of doing too little 
to pressure neighbor North Korea over its nuclear and missile programs.
He also upended four decades
 of diplomatic protocol by speaking by phone with Tsai Ing-wen, the 
president of Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory.
Beijing
 decried the phone call with Tsai and has rejected the other 
accusations. China has in fact been spending heavily from its foreign 
currency reserves to prop up the value of its currency, which would make
 its exports less competitive.
The
 prospect of a military confrontation over the South China Sea has been 
raised by Trump's chief strategist, Steve Bannon, when he hosted the 
conservative Breitbart News Daily radio show in 2015 and 2016.
Bannon
 said he envisioned the possibility of a U.S.-China war over the 
strategic waterbody within five to 10 years. China, which claims 
virtually all of the sea, has been building man-made islands in the area
 and equipping them with airstrips and military installations.
Despite
 Trump's confrontational image, Chinese internet users were warmed by a 
brief video clip of his granddaughter singing in Chinese that circulated
 on the web earlier this month.
 


