When a president hosts a meeting with a foreign head of state, it’s normal. When Donald Trump welcomed Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak at the White House yesterday, “normal” isn’t the adjective that comes to mind.
After all, as the New York Times reported, Najib is at the center of a corruption scandal that’s under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department.
[Najib] is under investigation by the United States and others for an estimated $3.5 billion that investigators believe he and his associates diverted from a Malaysian government fund that he headed. Among other things, the money was used to buy jewelry, real estate and the rights to Hollywood films.
The White House insisted that the Justice Department inquiry had no relevance to the meeting and would not figure in the conversation.
It’s an awkward dynamic to consider: when Trump and Najib met, who was the most controversial head of state in the room?
For his part, Najib has responded to the corruption allegations by firing investigators and dismissing allegations as “fake news.”
Traditionally, when the United States talked about exporting the power of ideas around the globe, this wasn’t what we meant.









