Rodman's Tour Of North Korea: Diplomacy Or Propaganda? Dennis Rodman took a team of former NBA players to North Korea to celebrate leader Kim Jong Un's birthday. NPR's Scott Simon likes the flamboyant and frank Rodman, but wonders if his tour amounts to sports diplomacy or propaganda for the North Korean regime.

Rodman's Tour Of North Korea: Diplomacy Or Propaganda?

Rodman's Tour Of North Korea: Diplomacy Or Propaganda?

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Rodman's Tour Of North Korea: Diplomacy Or Propaganda?

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Former NBA basketball star Dennis Rodman leaves a sports arena after a practice session for North Korean basketball players in Pyongyang in December 2013. David Guttenfelder/AP hide caption

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David Guttenfelder/AP

Former NBA basketball star Dennis Rodman leaves a sports arena after a practice session for North Korean basketball players in Pyongyang in December 2013.

David Guttenfelder/AP

There's been a publicity circus trailing Dennis Rodman to North Korea to present a big, bouncing birthday present of a basketball game to Kim Jong Un. But did you see the score of the game?

The U.S. team of former NBA players lost the first half, 47 to 39, before the sides were combined.

Well, if you play a team sponsored by a ruthless leader who recently had his own uncle iced, losing is probably the smart move.

I happen to like Dennis Rodman. I saw him up-close when he played for the Chicago Bulls, and he was one of the great re-bounders of all-time. He was famously flamboyant, but often also disarmingly frank about the frailties and insecurities he developed growing up as an abandoned young man on the roughest streets of Dallas. He seemed to call anyone he met his friend — a nice quality until you meet a despot.

This week Dennis Rodman apologized for suggesting that Kenneth Bae, the American man being held in a North Korean prison, must deserve being locked up for "hostile acts against the state."

"I had been drinking," Dennis Rodman said in a statement. "I embarrassed a lot of people. I'm very sorry."

Several of the players who joined Mr. Rodman in North Korea, including Kenny Anderson and Vin Baker, have had drinking problems that shortened their pro careers. The Dear Leader's birthday bash might have been their last chance at a big payday. NBA commissioner David Stern told CNN this week he thought the players had been "blinded by a flash of North Korean money."

Dennis Ross, the longtime U.S. diplomat, told us he believes that Dennis Rodman "is being used by North Korea," but adds, "someone ought to talk to the group about who and what they saw," because even small details of the crowd at that birthday basketball bash might offer insights into a bizarre and murky leadership.

Ping-Pong might have helped the U.S. and China break barriers in the early 1970s. But has Dennis Rodman's mystery tour through North Korea been sports diplomacy — or propaganda? With 16 million North Koreans in need of food, according to a U.N. report, and 130,000 being held as political prisoners, you might wonder if U.S. and North Korean athletes need to recognize their common humanity on the basketball court so much as the North Korean regime needs to see the humanity of its own people.

But is Dennis Rodman available for kids' birthday parties?