now, to step down. he made these remarks yesterday, less than 24 hours after the white house kind of side-stepped this topic. so, what do you make of the turn-around on this, and the hard turn-around on this, especially timingwise? >> sure. well, you know, the white house has said their greatest concern really was getting those americans that were in libya safely out of the country, and i think the majority of americans that have been accounted for certainly have been. they did not want to get us into a hostage situation, which you know, sitting on the other side of that now, i think that was the right decision. now that those americans are safe -- and also, let's note that now that he knows, the president knows he's got support from other leaders -- i mean, the united states can't just go in and handle this alone. now we've got the united nations on board, now we've got some of our other nato allies on board, so they can take a look at much more strident actions. >> the president is meeting with the u.n. secretary-general tomorrow. so far, the u.s. has frozen all libyan assets, and the u.n. did go ahead and vote for these sanctions. so, what could be next from the international community trying to come down hard on libya?