CBS News| Campaign 2000 Nader & Buchanan Talk Mideast Third-Party Candidates Comment On Crisis ... And They Critique Last Week's Debates Both Appeared On CBS News' Face The Nation WASHINGTON, Oct. 8, 2000 CBS Pat Buchanan and Ralph Nader (CBS) Ralph Nader and Pat Buchanan sounded off on the Mideast crisis and the race for the White House over the weekend.The third-party presidential candidates appeared on CBS News' Face The Nation on Sunday.Both the Green Party's Nader and the Reform Party's Buchanan agreed on which incident sparked the violence between Israel and the Palestinians: the visit by Ariel Sharon to Jerusalem's Temple Mount."That stupid and provocative act on the Temple Mount, or the Noble Sanctuary, with hundreds of Israeli security guards triggered this event," said Buchanan, who called the subsequent clashes a "popular uprising" or "people's revolution"."The Palestinian people have been occupied, persecuted, and oppressed for decades - and now they are responding to that," he added. "And certainly, Americans, quite frankly, who drove the British out of our country in a violent act for offenses far less than what are taking place here, ought to understand this."Nader described Sharon's visit as "not a called-for situation"."The tinder box that occurs there and the level of inchoate outrage can be easily provoked by people who aren't really interested in establishing a two-state solution with peace and normal relationships," he said of the crisis."The Israelis need and want security and they have overwhelmingly military superiority, while the Palestinians need justice," Nader added. "And the two parties are as close together to a settlement as they've ever been in five decades."Buchanan - a long-time critic of the United Nations - said the United States made the right move in abstaining from Saturday's vote on the U.N. Security Council resolution condemning the violence - a resolution that was critical of Israel."For years and years and years, we have allowed these Israelis to build up these illegal settlements on the West Bank, in East Jerusalem, on the Golan Heights, in Gaza. This has put all that dynamite down there," he said. "We did it because quite frankly U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East is held hostage to special interest in the United States, the Israeli lobby, quite frankly, and those who sustain and support it, which someone famously called the 'amen corner' about 10 years ago," added Buchanan, who used the phrase "amen corner" in reference to Israel during his opposition to the Persian Gulf War.As for the presidential race, neither Nader nor Buchanan was allowed to participate in the first debate between Democrat Al Gore and Republican George W. Bush last week. In fact, Nader was turned away at the door of the Boston event, even though he had a ticket given to him by a student. Both third-party contenders had plenty of critiques, anyway."I was very surprised how the mention of the poor escaped all these candidates on the debates. Forty seven million workers are working-poor in this country, they're not making a livable wage", said Nader. "I think this is a major issue that's being ignored - a booming economy and the majority of the workers slipping behind in real purchasing dollars, inadequate health insurance for 46 million people, 20 percent child poverty," he added.While Nader focused on the widening income gap between rich and poor, Buchanan dwelled on abortion rights."I thought Mr. Gore was his usual unctuous self through 90 minutes of intolerable discourse. Mr. Bush astonished me when he did not stand up at all for life," said Buchanan."Rhetorically, Mr. Bush is pro-life; objectively and in reality, he has ceased to be a pro-life candidate," Buchanan added. "He would not denounce RU-486, he would not even commit to appoint Supreme Court justices who would overturn Roe v. Wade. Three of his judges to the Texas Supreme Court turned out to be pro-abortion." Copyright 2000, CBS Worldwide Inc., All Rights Reserved. http://www.cbsnews.com/now/story/0,1597,239462-412,00.shtml