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TIME EUROPE
October 9, 2000, Vol. 156 No. 15


The Rumpled Nationalist
A profile of Vojislav Kostunica
By ROMESH RATNESAR

He is rumpled and retiring and most at ease in his modest Belgrade apartment, surrounded by law books and cats. But Vojislav Kostunica has learned to play tough. During the campaign for the Yugoslav presidency, the 56-year-old legal scholar traveled without bodyguards. When he stumped in Kosovo last month, supporters of Slobodan Milosevic pelted him with rotten vegetables, bottles and stones, opening a gash under his eye; Kostunica carried on with his speech, refusing protection from nato soldiers standing nearby. When the Milosevic campaign ran advertisements describing him as a "moral degenerate," Kostunica barely shrugged. "Politically, I have a pretty strong stomach," he said.

KostunicaŐs surprising steeliness has helped him stare down Milosevic, but it doesnŐt endear him to the West. Despite his passive, hang dog demeanor, Kostunica is an unapologetic Serb nationalist: he posed for a photograph in 1998 brandishing an assault rifle to show solidarity for Serb troops in Kosovo. During the campaign, his disdain for Milosevic was matched only by his contempt for the United States: one slogan urged voters to say "no to White Palace" — Milosevic's suburban mansion — and "no to the White House." He refused to support the 1995 Dayton accords, claiming they were unfair to Bosnian Serbs, and he lambasted the NATO campaign in Kosovo, while at the same time blasting Milosevic for his handling of the Kosovo crisis.

Kostunica has shown no sign that he would cooperate with demands that Serbian war criminals, including Milosevic, be delivered to the Hague; he believes the U.N. tribunal is a tool for American meddling.

And yet Kostunica still represents a refreshing turn in Serbian politics. He has none of the bombast of other Serb opposition leaders: he drives a battered Yugo and rarely travels outside the country. Kostunica was a reluctant candidate, agreeing to stand for election only after polls showed more recognizable figures, such as Vuk Draskovic and Zoran Djindjic, stood no chance of beating Milosevic. Kostunica appealed to voters with his common touch — he campaigned door-to-door in five cities a day — but also because he is unsullied by association with Milosevic, the West or the former communist regime. Since the 1970s, when he was fired from his teaching post at Belgrade University, Kostunica has been one of the country's most ardent advocates of democracy and liberal economics. That makes him palatable to the West, particularly given the alternative. "He is not an indicted war criminal," says a veteran U.S. diplomat. "He's not somebody who has started four or five wars. He is not a corrupt person. There is no comparison."

As President, Kostunica would likely blunt his anti-Western campaign rhetoric in an effort to improve ties with the E.U. and secure the lifting of international sanctions. And he has said that he would begin negotiations with Montenegro's President Milo Djukanovic about the future of the Yugoslav federation, talks that could result in a new constitution and eventual independence for Montenegro. But he will also demand greater rights for Serbs in Kosovo and will not entertain the idea of Kosovar independence without major concessions from the West. That may be the price of democracy. "The West has to realize," says former British Foreign Secretary David Owen, "that you can't have peace in the Balkans without a Serb government that speaks for the Serbs." If nothing else, Kostunica seems determined to do just that.

With reporting by Dejan Anastasijevic/ Belgrade and Andrew Purvis/Budapest

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More Stories

October 9, 2000

COVER STORY
Wave Goodbye
A humiliating defeat in the Yugoslav elections leaves Milosevic clinging to power. But his days are numbered

The Rumpled Nationalist
A profile of Vojislav Kostunica

The Long Goodbye
Milosevic may be finished, but Serbia still has some questions to answer

EUROPE
Nej!: The Danish Fallout
Denmark's stunning rejection of the euro will be felt across the European Union and beyond

A Tale of Two Cities
After 10 years of unity, Germany is still a nation divided by its past and burdened by the costs of its future

Poland's Second Left Wing
Lech Walesa and Solidarity each face crushing electoral defeat

Tax, Lies and Videotape
A juicy political scandal marks a nasty, if bizarre, beginning to the Chirac-Jospin presidential race

Bounty Descendants Hunt A Future
Like their mutinous ancestors, the people of Pitcairn face hard times

MIDDLE EAST
Bibi Bounces Back
Netanyahu's corruption case is dropped, but will he rejoin — and be welcomed into — the political fray?

OLYMPICS
Sydney's Glorious Failure
Australia shows the world that a clean, orderly Olympics can be a winner

THE ARTS
The Fashion Games
These seven up-and-coming fashion designers are the ones to watch as they show their stuff for spring

DEPARTMENTS
Techwatch

World Watch

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