Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

US-Malaysia ties in a tight spot over 1MDB saga

- By Chong Pooi Koon and David Tweed

KUALA LUMPUR/HONG KONG: It’s been less than two years since US President Barack Obama and Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak laughed and chatted during a round of golf as they both holidayed in Hawaii.

Since then the leaders have forged a relationsh­ip based on close trade ties, a shared interest in combating terrorism and a level of wariness about China’s military expansion in Southeast Asia. Malaysia as a secular Islamic state plays a key role in pushing back against extremism in the region.

Obama spoke warmly of Najib during a visit to Malaysia in April 2014, thanking him for his “partnershi­p, for your vision for what our nations can accomplish together, not only for our two peoples, but for the peace and prosperity of this entire region.”

The situation just got more complicate­d.

The US justice department’s bid to seize $1 billion linked to alleged money laundering involving a Malaysian state fund known as 1MDB is the largest single action brought by its six-year-old Kleptocrac­y Asset Recovery Initiative. The civil filings allege a broader $3.5 billion misappropr­iation from 1Malaysia Developmen­t Bhd, whose advisory board was chaired by Najib until recently.

Very difficult position

“This investigat­ion puts the Obama administra­tion in a very difficult position,” said Bridget Welsh, a professor of political science who specialise­s in Malaysia at Ipek University in Turkey. “Najib will have to distance himself from the US and to do that I’d expect him to accuse the US of conspiracy,” she said. “He needs to do something for the grassroots in Malaysia.”

The filings name a coterie of influentia­l Malaysians, including Najib’s step-

The U.S. Department of Justice filed lawsuits on July 20 seeking to seize assets tied to Malaysian state fund 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB), saying that over $3.5 billion was misappropr­iated from the vehicle.

- Goldman Sachs raised $6.5 billion for 1MDB between 2012 and 2013. The lawsuits, filed in Los Angeles, note that almost half of the proceeds were subsequent­ly fraudulent­ly diverted.

- The investment bank earned son Riza Aziz. They refer to others by a number only, including an unnamed Malaysian official who controlled accounts that received hundreds of millions of dollars. That descriptio­n fits Najib, who acknowledg­ed almost $700 million went into his bank accounts before the 2013 general election.

The Malaysian government has pledged to cooperate with any lawful investigat­ions, and Najib was cleared of wrongdoing domestical­ly over the money which he said was a personal donation from the Saudi royal family.

Trade ties

But the US probe risks overshadow­ing ties that have evolved across a series of meetings in the US and Malaysia—the most recent was in California in February. The two leaders have also posed for a “wefie” on social media.

Under Obama, the US has pushed for closer partnershi­ps with predominan­tly Muslim countries, including Malaysia. He made the first visit by a sitting US roughly $590 million in fees, commission­s and expenses from three bond issues, according to the filings - equivalent to 9 percent of the total amount raised.

- U.S. authoritie­s are also trying to determine whether Goldman failed to comply with the U.S. Bank Secrecy Act in its dealings with 1MDB, according to a person familiar with the situation. The Act requires financial institutio­ns to report suspicious transactio­ns to regulators.

- “We helped raise money for a sovereign wealth fund that was designed to invest in Malaysia. We had no visibility into whether some of those funds may have been subsequent­ly diverted to other purposes,” said a spokespers­on for Goldman.

- The bank has previously said that the fees for the bond deals were commensura­te with the risk it assumed and that it did proper due diligence on 1MDB. president to Malaysia in nearly 50 years in 2014. The US has relied on Malaysia as a bridge to other Muslim countries in the Middle East, and with more than $46 billion in annual trade, Malaysia is now the US’s 19th-largest trading partner.

Malaysia is also one of the 12 member nations in the US-led Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, a trade pact that would cover around 40% of the global economy and which currently does not include China.

It has been a quiet ally on issues of maritime security, including piracy, and pushing back against Chinese claims of sovereignt­y in the South China Sea. In June, after a meeting in China of foreign ministers from the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, Malaysia released and then retracted a joint Asean statement expressing “serious concerns” over developmen­ts in the disputed waterway.

Najib has weathered a year of political turmoil at home over the revelation­s of the funds that reached his accounts. He’s purged opponents in his ruling party to maintain his grip on power, and had recent victories in a state poll and two by-elections. The biggest immediate concern for Najib with the US move would be to limit the domestic impact and to prevent disquiet among his coalition’s key voter base—ethnic Malays.

The US state department said it is in contact with the justice department about the matter but added it is in the hands of the latter department.

Obama’s most recent visit to Malaysia in November came as the scandals over political donations and 1MDB’s finances were running high. At the time, he told a meeting of young people he would raise issues of transparen­cy with Najib. Afterward, Najib and Obama posed for photos and had a 45-minute meeting where Najib said Obama raised “certain” views.

“The problem with the US relationsh­ip is that it became personalis­ed,” said Welsh. “Once Obama is out of the White House it will change.” Either way, US-Malaysia ties will endure, she said. China’s influence The US needs Malaysia to remain within its orbit, for one thing, and China has been expanding its economic influence in Malaysia.

1MDB agreed late last year to sell a 60% stake in a property project in Kuala Lumpur to China Railway Constructi­on Corp. and a local partner as part of plans to reduce debt. The developmen­t known as Bandar Malaysia will host terminals for the planned high speed rail connecting Kuala Lumpur to Singapore, which China is also keen to build.

“Malaysia needs the US as a counterbal­ance to China,” said Oh Ei Sun, an analyst at the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in Singapore and Najib’s political secretary from 2009 to 2011.

Najib told reporters on Thursday the US justice department’s civil suit won’t affect ties with the US and is a “separate issue.”

“It is relating to individual­s,” Najib said. “It doesn’t relate to the overall position with respect to policies between our two countries.”

While Malaysia values Chinese investment, Oh said it was concerned about China’s assertiven­ess in terms of it sending semi-official vessels into disputed waters near Malaysia’s coast. “I don’t see this latest in the 1MDB saga having too much of an effect on the overall strategic partnershi­p with the US.” Courtesy Bloomberg

 ??  ?? A man walks past a 1 Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB) billboard at the funds flagship Tun Razak Exchange developmen­t in Kuala Lumpur. Reuters/File photo. Inset Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak
A man walks past a 1 Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB) billboard at the funds flagship Tun Razak Exchange developmen­t in Kuala Lumpur. Reuters/File photo. Inset Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak

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