The agreement marked the first time Kuala Lumpur had purchased warships from Beijing and came only two weeks after Philippines' President Rodrigo Duterte announced his "separation" from Washington during a visit to China.
Under the terms of the deal, two of the vessels will be built in Malaysia and two in China, Najib said in an op-ed published in the China Daily newspaper today during his week-long trip to Beijing.
"I call this a landmark decision because before this we have not bought such vessels from China," Najib said after talks with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang yesterday, according to Malaysian newspaper The Star.
Analysts said the accord was a setback for Washington's "pivot" towards Asia and underlined China's increasing diplomatic and economic gravitational pull in the region - despite its ongoing territorial disputes.
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"This is the new regional norm. Now China is implementing the power and the US is in retreat," said Southeast Asia politics analyst Bridget Welsh.
Gu Xiaosong, a researcher at government think tank Guangxi Academy of Social Sciences, was quoted in China's Global Times as saying: "Southeast Asia's diplomatic situation has shifted towards China following the visits of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and Vietnam's leader this year."
Malaysia's relations with the United States warmed after Najib took office in 2009 following decades of periodic distrust.
But he has increasingly leaned towards China as it became Malaysia's biggest trading partner and after the eruption last year of a massive corruption scandal implicating Najib and a state investment fund he founded.
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