I'll post this from an e-mail he's sent out:
"The Petraeus Report: What It Means and What It Doesn't Mean
I began this thought experiment yesterday in a speech at the American Enterprise Institute. Today, I'm going to talk about some of the highlights of that speech, but you can view and read it here.
Because this rethinking of the past six years is meant to make it easier to be creative about the next six years, I began my speech with a comment about the latest benchmark assessment of our national security efforts since 9/11 -- the Petraeus Report.
As I mentioned last week, the Petraeus Report is an important report. The debate over it will be an important debate.
But it is critical that the Petraeus Report be viewed in context.
It is a campaign report about a specific campaign. Iraq is a campaign in a larger war, just as Afghanistan is a campaign in a larger war.
Yet, the Petraeus Report is not a report on "the war." We are not having a debate in Washington this week about "the war."
Beyond the Petraeus Report: The Report on the Larger War
Here's how I put it in my speech yesterday:
Beyond the Petraeus Report, we need a report on the larger war with the Irreconcilable Wing of Islam.
This enemy is irreconcilable with the modern civilized world because its values would block any woman from being in this room, having a job, voting, being educated.
It is irreconcilable because it cannot tolerate other religions or other lifestyles.
It represents what some have called an "Islamo-fascist" approach to imposing its views on others, and as such, it is a mortal threat to our way of life, to freedom and to the rule of law.
The Irreconcilable Wing of Islam has emerged as an extremist movement against not only non-Muslims but also against moderate Muslims who wish both to preserve their faith and to be a part of the modern world. This extremism has led to civil war in Algeria killing more than 100,000 Muslims. It has led to continuing violence in Lebanon, more than 2,000 killed in Thailand, the Philippines and a number of other places. It has mobilized forces outside traditional trouble spots, including recently Germany, Denmark and Great Britain. And while the vast majority of Muslims wish to be a part of the civilized world and do not want the extremists in the Irreconcilable Wing of Islam to win, the enemy's global reach, including in places like Paraguay and Venezuela, is greater than anyone might have expected a decade ago."