TEHRAN (Basirat)- Chinese state media has gone on the offensive against US President-elect Donald Trump, claiming that he does not have what it takes to lead the US. The public renunciation comes after Mr. Trump sent a series of tweets accusing China of stealing US military hardware.

Chinese state media has gone on the offensive against US President-elect Donald Trump, claiming that he does not have what it takes to lead the US. The public renunciation comes after Mr. Trump sent a series of tweets accusing China of stealing US military hardware.
Donald Trump hasn't even been handed the keys to the White House
yet, but he's already been labeled with the epithet of being clueless on
how to govern.
The Chinese Communist party-controlled Global Times ran an editorial on
Monday (December 19), which pulled no punches against the upcoming world
leader.
President-elect Trump, it said, "is not behaving as a president who will become master of the White House."
"He bears no sense of how to lead a superpower."
The It comes after Trump took to Twitter on the weekend to accuse China of stealing a US drone, saying:
China steals United States Navy research drone in international
waters — rips it out of water and takes it to China in unprecedented
act.
"Trump's second tweet makes people worry that he will treat China-US relations as child's play," it said.
"Now people don't know if Trump is engaged in a psychological war with
China or he is just unprofessional, even though he will be sworn in
soon."
ndeed, China-US relations have been on a remarkable roller coaster
over the last weeks since Donald Trump won the US election in November
2016.
The view from Beijing was initially cautiously optimistic. During his
election campaign, Mr. Trump had suggested repeatedly that he would
scrap the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement, which has
excluded China in the Pacific region.
However, any good will was quickly doused when Trump broke decades of
diplomatic convention by calling the president of Taiwan, Tsai Ing-wen.
China views Taiwan has a renegade breakaway state, whereas Taiwan
considers itself an independent country.
However, the US has publicly backed China's so-called 'One-China'
policy since 1979. As part of this, there had been no official contact
between a US and Taiwanese President since that time.
Well, that is, until Donald Trump.
Beijing was so incensed at his departure from diplomatic protocol, that it lodged an official complaint with the US.
Trump was undeterred.
Speaking after the call, Trump said:
"I fully understand the 'One-China' policy, but I don't know why we have
to be bound by a 'One-China' policy unless we make a deal with China
having to do with other things, including trade."
However, Beijing's now very public disapproval of Trump could have
very seriously negative political and trade consequences for his new
administration.
In getting elected, Mr. Trump staked his reputation on being able
to do "great deals" with other countries like China, to repatriate back
jobs to the US.
Also, a key domestic priority for Mr. Trump is to develop US
infrastructure, which has been chronically undeveloped in many parts of
the country.
Trump's advisers have previously briefed the media that they
believe that Chinese foreign direct investment in major infrastructure
projects would be an ideal way for the US and China to work together.
However, after already making China hostile before any negotiations have
even begun, Mr. Trump may find Beijing more uncompromising to work with
than he had hoped.