The Korea Herald

지나쌤

Rodman ‘planning vacation’ with N. Korea’s Kim

By Korea Herald

Published : March 12, 2013 - 20:08

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WASHINGTON (AFP) ― The odd couple is getting odder: first, Dennis Rodman and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un took in a hoops game side-by-side. Now they’re planning a holiday together.

The retired and flamboyant 51-year-old Rodman, who announced the vacation plan Monday, became the most high-profile American to meet Kim, doing so during a recent trip to Pyongyang which came against a backdrop of increased North Korean saber-rattling on the peninsula.

While officials in Washington have played down the significance of the trip, stating that the former Chicago Bulls star does not represent the views of the United States, Rodman said Monday he plans to return to the isolated and impoverished state. 
Dennis Rodman Dennis Rodman

In brief comments to the KXJB local television station in Fargo, North Dakota, Rodman described Kim as a friend.

“I don’t condone what he does, but he’s my friend,” Rodman told a reporter. Asked if he planned to return to North Korea, Rodman replied: “Yes I will. In August. I’m vacationing with him.”

Rodman’s remarks came as Kim threatened to “wipe out” a South Korean island and North Korea came under renewed diplomatic fire, with U.S. sanctions and U.N. charges of gross rights abuses.

U.S. State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell last week rejected the suggestion that Rodman could become an ambassador to North Korea, given his new unexpected relationship with Kim.

“I’m not even sure I can dignify that with a response,” Ventrell said.

“Dennis Rodman has never been a player in our diplomacy. He does not represent the views of the United States,” Ventrell added.

“We have direct channels of communications with the DPRK. They know how to get in touch with us,” Ventrell insisted.

“Instead of spending their money on staging sporting events, the North Korean regime should focus on the well-being of its people, and it should come in line with its international obligations.”

The United States and North Korea have no official diplomatic relations, but have kept a channel of communications open at the United Nations in New York, and Sweden also acts as a go-between for the two nations.