bob haeger, i want you to -- i assume you're having flashbacks to what happened in a story that you coveredhoroughy for this network, the korean airliner that was shot down by the soviets back in 1983. similarities and differences and what is it that you remember the difficulties of getting information out of the soviets then versus what we're going to expect now. >> much of the same issues at stake here. interesting you're talking about the black boxes. i remember there was this race to get to the black boxes in the case of the shootdown by the soviets. they were in the sea up north of japan and the question is who could get to them first. the soviets got to them first and we didn't hear or see anything of those black boxes for years or maybe a decade or more. generally the issue here is who fired the missile. and to find that out, i mean you're really talking about spy satellite imagery, infrared imagery and so forth. it will be interesting how much of that the u.s. has and is prepared to lay out for the rest of the world to see as this investigation goes along. there's more of that kind