Singapore’s Straits Times published a column by Indonesia’s top cabinet minister, Luhut Panjaitan, on Friday, in which he said that the Trump administration’s hostile rhetoric toward Islam has left many in the world’s most populous Muslim nation feeling that a wedge has been driven between the US and Indonesia. “These sentiments will take time to disappear, and they will do so only when it is clear that the US has not abandoned its openness to members of all faiths,” Luhut said. Trump’s history of anti-Muslim rhetoric hits dangerous new low last week when he retweeted a series of anti-Muslim propaganda videos shared online by a high-ranking official in the ultra-nationalist UK political group Britain First.