issue. still, very high levels the president s been briefed, the fbi was called and jeh johnson has spoken about this. that s right, brooke and i think it shows the initial level of concern of the stains to make sure that this wasn t some wider type of issue, some u.s. hack or cyber attack. president obama was breached. the fbi did reach out to the new york stock exchange. obviously they always have close cooperation with agencies of this nature and here at the state department i checked and they have already looked into their systems and the state department spokesman mark toner just said that there were no affecting of the state department computers and clearly every u.s. agency right now looking at their own systems to see if there,isn t something wider and even though it s terribly coincidental take it into the context of the wider climate that exists in the u.s. there have been a lot of hacks, a lot of cyber attacks. just last month you had the u.s.
weapons used to kill stevens and three other americans on 9/11. the fall of muammar qaddafi after four decades of aauthoritarian rule in libya, led to the dissolution of the country s security forces. the disbursal of tens of thousands of small and heavy weapons and rampant lawless inness. in another memo from nebraska of this year nordstrom warned quote al qaeda affiliated groups including al qaeda aqim and other violent extremist groups are likely to take advantage of the ongoing political turmoil. the u.s. government remains concerned that such individuals and groups may use libya as a platform from which to conduct attacks in the region. there is two real aspects of this that we need to look at. one is the events leading up to the attack in and the intelligence failures there. and then what clearly is either a coverup or is gross incompetence following it. state department spokesman mark toner told me the secretary of state will fully address these matters only after the depart
deterrent. what it is about here is the range of this missile. they have had nukes for quite some time. now they can aim those nuclear warheads or will be in a couple of years east towards china and west toward iran. that is the key for the indians here, shep. shepard: most interesting in all of this is nobody seems to care. very interesting. the u.s. officials say this is very different because india is a stable democracy. as opposed to north korea who attempted that failed launch last week which they say is an unpredictable, dictatorship. now, the although the state department spokesman mark toner did seem to struggle a little today when asked to explain how this fit into the administration s general call for restraint among nuclear nations in their testing programs. listen. we believe, you know, they have a solid nonproliferation record and that, you know, that they re playing a
barbara walters airing today. listen. we don t kill our people. nobody kill no government in the world kill its people unless it s led by crazy person. i game president by public support. it s impossible for anyone in this state to give order to kill. do you feel guilty? i did my best not feel guilty when you do your best. in the annuals of crazy claims by crazy dictators, the very idea that he has nothing to do with the killing of those unarmed protesters really puts him up there, trace, with colonel qaddafi. jonathan, is there any reaction from the u.s. tonight? the u.s. reaction has basically been one of bemusement and horror. the white house spokesman said that it simply was not credible. and listen here to the state department spokesman mark toner. he appeared utterly
supposedly did not recommend him when he tried to get another job with a california contractor. jon: what is bae saying about all this? reporter: well they of course realize this is a big problem for the company in terms of, you know, a public relations disaster. they are, they are calling dakota meyer a hero. they re wishing him well but this is what the spokesman said in response to the allegations of selling weapons to pakistan. quote, the u.s. department of state, not a bae systems makes the decision what defense-related products can be exported. the state department spokesman mark toner was asked about whether these thermal optic sites had been, sights had been sold to pakistan. here is what he said yesterday. i m aware in august we approved or did approve a marketing license that allowed bae to temporarily export up to 20 thermal imaging rifle scopes to pakistan but that was for sales demonstration and none