Dohnald Trump’s man in Russia. Photo: David Becker/Getty Images for National Clean

The White House announced on Tuesday that Jon Huntsman will be nominated as the U.S. ambassador to Russia, which is awkward for a number of reasons. First, there’s the whole Russia-election-hacking scandal, which was highlighted again on Tuesday when it emerged that President Trump had an undisclosed meeting with Russian president Vladimir Putin.

Then there’s Huntsman’s personal history with Trump. As noted when reports emerged in March that the former Utah governor — who previously served as ambassador to Singapore and China — was headed to Moscow, Trump attacked Huntsman about a month after he ended his 2012 campaign:

Jon Huntsman called to see me. I said no, he gave away our country to China! @JonHuntsman — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 9, 2012

Huntsman endorsed Trump for president in 2016, only to call on him to drop out of the race when the Access Hollywood video emerged.

Finally, the Trump administration found a way to make the announcement even more uncomfortable: spelling Huntsman’s name wrong in the statement announcing his nomination.

Inbox: Trump officially nominates Huntsman as Ambassador to Russia pic.twitter.com/OuhLaKjkO5 — Zeke Miller (@ZekeJMiller) July 18, 2017

To be fair, sometimes it’s hard to remember who’s a “John” and who’s a “Jon” — but different spellings of his name within the same paragraph probably should have raised some flags.