Basketball Hall of Famer and wannabe fixer of international hostility Dennis Rodman is back at it, trying to mend a big gap between North Korea and the rest of the world, as he is planning to organize a basketball game involving a team from the hermit state in Guam.

Speaking with Jonathan Kaiman of the Los Angeles Times, Rodman expressed his excitement over his grand plans.

“We thought, ‘This would be awesome!’” Rodman said in an interview in Beijing, his third stop on a “humanitarian tour” of Asia to promote peace between the U.S. and North Korea. “The people in Guam are all about it. They love it. You get a team from North Korea, get these guys from Pyongyang. Play it in Beijing.”

It could be recalled that Rodman has developed an unlikely friendship with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and has visited the recluse nation of 25.3 million people five times dating back to 2013, making the ex-Chicago Bull some sort of an anomalous figure in the strained and precarious relationship between Washington and Pyongyang.

Rarely in Rodman’s NBA career that the rebounding machine showed qualities of someone who could stop two nations on the brink of launching nuclear missiles at each other, but hey, at least he’s doing something.