‘Unpresidented’ Trump tweet draws mockery

Donald Trump

US President-elect Donald Trump AP

WASHINGTON—US President-elect Donald Trump got plenty of attention—but not the kind he was looking for—after a tweet on Saturday calling out China for its seizure of an unmanned US naval probe.

“China steals United States Navy research drone in international waters—rips it out of water and takes it to China in unpresidented (sic) act,” the real estate magnate wrote on his favorite platform.

“Unpresidented” quickly became a top trending topic on Twitter in the United States, as online wags savaged the incoming president for the unfortunate misspelling.

“TrumpSpellCheck—Unpresidentedly effective,” tweeted “Harry Potter” author JK Rowling.

“Dear world, most Americans really wish we could be #unpresidented,” another user wrote.

Even Merriam-Webster dictionary weighed in.

“The #WordOfTheDay is… not ’unpresidented’. We don’t enter that word. That’s a new one,” it tweeted.

Trump deleted his tweet after about an hour, replacing it with one correctly using the word “unprecedented.”

While many mocked the deeply divisive political novice, famous for his verbal tics and gaffes, supporters jumped to his defense and said critics were piling on a typo while ignoring the bigger problem.

Hours after his first tweet, Trump returned to his preferred forum of Twitter to write: “We should tell China that we don’t want the drone they stole back … let them keep it!”

Trump was referring to China’s seizure on Thursday of an unmanned US naval probe in international waters of the South China Sea, a serious provocation amid rising tensions between the two major powers.

Trump has repeatedly infuriated China in recent weeks, questioning longstanding US policy on Taiwan, calling China a currency manipulator and threatening to impose punitive tariffs on Chinese imports.

Both Beijing and Washington confirmed on Saturday that the probe would be returned, without providing details of the handover.

But China’s Ministry of Defense also slammed alleged American “hyping” of the incident as “inappropriate and unhelpful.”—AFP

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