Donald Trump has done countless things to earn the title of “national embarrassment.” He regularly ALL CAPS tweets at world leaders, in a style more befitting a crazy, old man yelling at his microwave than the leader of the most powerful country in the world. He frequently refers to himself in the third person. He claims to have invented a phrase that have been in use for nearly a century. The list, obviously, goes on. But perhaps one of the president’s most embarrassing qualities is that he regularly sucks up to hostile foreign leaders who in no way have the U.S.’s best interests at heart, and to one hostile foreign leader in particular: Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

Most recent in his long saga of cringingly deferential gestures is the mortifying press conference he gave with the Russian president in Helsinki, in which Trump essentially sutured his lips to Putin’s ass. And while that, theoretically, would’ve been enough to inspire anyone with an ounce of self-awareness to hide their face in shame and refuse to mention the v-word ever again, for Trump, it apparently wasn’t enough. Shortly after his return to the U.S., the president announced he was extending an invitation to Putin for a D.C. visit—much to the shock of his national intelligence chief. And after days of turmoil over the invite, which even Republican lawmakers intimated was a terrible idea, the Kremlin came out with a response seemingly designed to humiliate America even more thoroughly:

The Kremlin was reticent on Tuesday about whether it would accept an invitation from U.S. President Donald Trump to hold a summit with Vladimir Putin in Washington later this year, saying only that the two men had other chances to meet as well.

Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov said that though Washington and Moscow agreed there was a need for another Putin-Trump meeting, Russia had not yet begun any practical preparations for a new meeting.

“There are other options (to meet) which our leaders can look at,” Ushakov told reporters, citing a meeting of G20 leaders in Argentina which starts at the end of November.

“Maybe there will be other international events which Trump and Putin will take part in.”

So not only did Trump beg his buddy Vlad to come visit him in Washington just 72 hours after their two-and-a-half-hour one-on-one meeting in Finland, but no one on Trump’s team—i.e. the people we’re trusting to orchestrate U.S. foreign policy—had the sense to find out if there was even a chance Russia would say yes first. And worse, now Trump’s slavish devotion to Putin is doubly obvious. “[Putin] humiliated the president and now he is playing with him,” Representative Jerry Nadler told CNN on Tuesday. “Now he’s just running a victory lap. Again it’s insulting to the United States.” Stay tuned this weekend, when Trump asks Putin out a third time, only to be told by the Kremlin that his dance card is full until 2021.