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Chinese state media calls Trump a rookie

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Chinese media react with fury over US president-elect Trump's tough talk

BEIJING Donald Trump is a "diplomatic rookie" who must learn not to cross Beijing on issues like trade and Taiwan, Chinese state media said yesterday, warning that America could pay dearly for his naivety.

Mr Trump's protocol-shattering call with Taiwan's president and a Twitter tirade against Beijing's policies could risk upending the delicate balance between the world's two largest economies, major media outlets said.

"Provoking friction and messing up China-US relations won't help 'make America great again'," said a front-page opinion piece in the overseas edition of Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily.

The nationalist Global Times newspaper's Chinese edition also ran a page-one story on Mr Trump's "inability to keep his mouth shut", damning his "provocation and falsehoods".

Mr Trump fired off two tweets on Sunday blasting China for devaluing its currency, taxing US imports and building military installations in the South China Sea.

The comments followed criticism of Mr Trump in US and Chinese media for taking a congratulatory phone call from Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, a move that flew in the face of nearly 40 years of diplomatic protocol and raised questions about whether the president-elect intends to pursue a hard line against Beijing.

Official reaction from Beijing has been muted, but China often uses state media to telegraph its policy positions, sometimes employing rhetoric beyond the diplomatic pale.

The Global Times' English-language edition filled its opinion pages with editorials slamming the president-elect.

Noting that Sino-US relations had reached a delicate equilibrium thanks to years of careful management, an editorial in the paper warned that Mr Trump "can make a lot of noise but that does not exempt him from the rules of the major power game," adding that he "doesn't have sufficient resources" to be provocative with China.

"Trump's China-bashing tweet is just a cover for his real intent, which is to treat China as a fat lamb and cut a piece of meat off it," it said.

While China seems to have hoped the rhetoric was more bark than bite, initial signs suggests Mr Trump will continue to take an aggressive line on the world's second largest economy. - AFP

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