journalists, and then some libyan civilians that had been brought to the scene jon. jon: jennifer griffin at the pentagon for us, thanks. jenna: some remarkable news there from jennifer griffin, and one of the things you probably heard some of our guests and experts say an our air is why are we in libya? libya's oil isn't our oil. it's europe's oil. so if that's the issue, then why are we even involved? eric bolling from the fox business network is here. eric, despite all of that, the oil prices keep going up and that directly affects us. how would you answer that question, we're involved and prices are going up but everyone says it's not our oil. >> it's a fair question, most of the libyan oil goes to other parts, goes to europe. remember, oil, there's a fine line, the balance between supply and demand in oil. we use and produce about 83 1/2 million barrels of oil a day. so it doesn't matter if you produce it in libya, produce it in alaska, in texas, it doesn't matter where you produce it, it all goes into the pool as one lump sum. so if you pull 1 1/2 million barrels per day, and bring