Dennis Rodman, Who Hangs With Trump and Kim, Says Korea Peace Deal ‘Could Still Work’

Reuters
By Reuters
September 9, 2019US News
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Dennis Rodman, Who Hangs With Trump and Kim, Says Korea Peace Deal ‘Could Still Work’
Dennis Rodman Visits The FOX Business Network at FOX Studios in New York City on December 9, 2014. (Laura Cavanaugh/Getty Images)

LOS ANGELES—Former U.S. basketball star Dennis Rodman, one of a handful of Westerners to have met North Korean head of state Kim Jong Un, and a friend of U.S. President Donald Trump, said on Sept. 9 he thought the two leaders could work out a deal.

“I think that it could still work. I just think that we need to stay on the right path to make it work,” said Rodman, who was at the June 2018 Singapore summit between Kim and Trump—the first between leaders of the two states who have been technically at war since the of the Korean War in 1953.

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Former-NBA player Dennis Rodman holds a news conference in New York to discuss his recent trip to North Korea, on Sep. 9, 2013. (TIMOTHY CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)

“So, I think that people should not give up on the U.S. trying to engage with North Korea in a good, safe manner,” Rodman told Reuters television in an interview.

North Korea said on Monday it was willing to restart nuclear talks with the United States in late September, but warned that chances of a deal could end unless Washington takes a fresh approach.

“I think Kim Jong Un wants peace. I know him very well, I think he wants peace. I think … people don’t realize that he wants to move on into the 21st century. I think he doesn’t want to give up his country. I don’t blame him.”

“But I think, you know, everything else is in the way,” he said of the stalemated talks that would have North Korea dismantle its nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of international sanctions that have crippled its economy.

NTD Photo
Former NBA star Dennis Rodman (R) of the US greets North Korean athletes at the Pyongyang Indoor Stadium on June 15, 2017. (KIM WON-JIN/AFP/Getty Images)

Rodman said Trump put him on his reality show “The Apprentice” years ago “to help and guide me … because I was out there being buck wild, doing my thing, having a good time. That’s his way of showing that he cares about me.”

Rodman’s earlier visits to North Korea included a basketball game he organized, an event chronicled in the documentary film “Big Bang in Pyongyang,” which featured Rodman singing “Happy Birthday” to Kim, as well as scenes of inebriated and erratic behavior by the basketball Hall of Famer.

By Omar Younis

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