joining me, richard burgess, a retired mission commander of the p-3c, the plane being used in the search, also joining me now, former aviation correspondent, bob hager. bob, let me start with you, you've been covering this, as well. let's assess and take a step back from how we started this someday, to this breaking development of the officials determining that this flight did, in fact, end over the indian ocean. where at this point, what is the key next step here? >> okay, well, the next step is to find this wreckage they've been looking at so far from satellites, see if you can actually see it on the surface and make a positive identification, because this new satellite data today, the calculations really from the satellite, simply gets it down there in this corridor in the south indian ocean. >> did we not know this friday from the analysis that had come in before the weekend that these first pieces of debris that were not able to be located due to weather and other obvious obstacles, did we not know this on friday, the likelihood that the aircraft had ended, as they are putting it to