security council. they re not going to be get it. russia and china. they do need other countries, as many as possible, to sign onto this and endorse it and to help. that s one of the things they re trying to do right now. they have support from the number of countries as you might expect. france, u.k., canada, saudia arab arabia. they want to make sure they have the information correct. you know, when you give intelligence information, there s a chance that you can say how you got it. where did that information come from? this information came from u.s. sources but also from international sources which have been kind of unnamed. they want to make sure that they don t say too much but they would like to say enough to convince people that they have a
i know when i first got to the united nations in 93, they were you were the u.s. ambassador there. i was the u.s. ambassador there, and they were threatening to pull out of the nonproliferation treaty. and i was bound and determined that he would thought get my goat, that we would not react to it. and so i said, i d like to thank the representative, for making me feel 40 years younger, because i m about to have my birthday, with this cold war rhetoric. they have been doing this kind of thing i was there a little bit more than two years ago, spent six days in pyongyang, at a time there was also severe tension. the north koreans had just bombed an island, killing a bunch of south koreans. they had bombed a south korean warship killing a bunch of sailors, more than 40 or 50 sailors. at that time the saudia arabiou didn t respond. the president of south korea is tough, she is determined if sim har kinds of provocative am
a previously unknown group identifying itself as cyber fighters is exsuspected in the attacks with tacking from teheran. there was a major saudia attack on ramco the world s largest producer of crude oil with 30,000 computers affected. they say this is evidence of a brewing cyberwar. win days of the 9/11 event in benghazi another attack targeting the banks. seen as sending a message to the west. the cyber attacks may be the prelude to something more disruptive or destructive. it showed that they had a growing ka b capability and many believed it was more of a probing exercise, in other words, trying to find july in a rjuly in a vulnerabilities
they said that they recovered scores more recently. and they want to resume the joint recovery efforts with the u.s. that s good news. but at the same time, before north korea and the u.s. engage, north korea has to stop some of this behavior, susms the showing of individuals and many other measures that have been very provocative. thanks, governor richardson. there you have it, don. it s a very, very fluid situation, very tense right now. as you know, the north koreans say they ll respond militarily if the saudia arabians outh kor with these measures. they re scheduled to meet in emergency session in new york sunday morning. it s still a fluid situation. the north koreans watching it extremely closely as is everyone else. don? wolf blitzer and governor bill richardson in pyongyang.
that. i mean, the granddaddy of all of them is saudia ram co-. saudia ramco is the biggest oil company in the world. it s the biggest company in the world. it s owned by the saudi government, it s state controlled. the guy in charge of saudia ramco is the state oil minister of saudi arabia. his government job is running saudia ramco. same deal with the national iranian oil company. the guy in charge there is the state oil minister. you ll find the same thing at all of these giant state-run government-run oil companies in almost all the big oil-producing around the world. it s the kuwait petroleum corporation and the abu dhabi national oil company and petro china. in russia it s rosnaft, it s the state run oil company of russia. it s not run by a random ceo who worked his way up through the company. it s controlled by the kremlin, it s controlled by vladimir putin so he put his former deputy prime minister in charge