Below is Senator  Lieberman's important speech to the American Israel Public Affairs  Committee from yesterday. I wanted to  draw your attention to this passage in particular:  
  
 There is something profoundly wrong when opposition to the  war in Iraq seems to inspire greater passion than opposition to Islamist  extremism. There is something profoundly wrong when there is so much distrust of  our intelligence community that some Americans doubt the plain and ominous facts  about the threat to us posed by Iran. And there is something profoundly wrong  when, in the face of attacks by radical Islam, we think we can find safety and  stability by pulling back, by talking to and accommodating our enemies, and  abandoning our friends and allies. Some of this wrong-headed thinking about the  world is happening because we're in a political climate where, for many people,  when George Bush says "yes," their reflex reaction is to say "no." That is  unacceptable." 
  
 For more, read  on.
  
 
   Lieberman Speech  to AIPAC National Policy Conference 
 
 
 WASHINGTON,  D.C. - Senator Joe Lieberman spoke to the American Israel  Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) National Policy Conference yesterday.  
 The text of the speech, as  prepared for delivery, is below: 
 Thank you so much. Thank you,  Lonny, for that kind introduction. It's a pleasure to be here among so many  friends. 
 I don't know if I can ever  sufficiently thank Lonny and so many of you who stood with me throughout the  long journey that was my 2006 re-election campaign. 
 But trust me. I will try—for as  long as God gives me life, and the good people of Connecticut give me the  privilege of service. 
 And besides, now AIPAC can say  it not only has bipartisan support. It has tripartisan support.  
 In the great policy discussions  in Washington, I've learned, there are opponents on the one side, and on the  other, there are allies, and friends, and then, there is family.  
 For me and many others, AIPAC  is family—united in our shared history, our shared values, and our shared vision  for the future. As family, we can talk frankly with each other, and that is what  I would like to do with you today. 
 The fact is we can't afford  anything less than honesty at a time like this—a time when, as citizens of  America and supporters of Israel, we confront grave and growing dangers to the  nations we care so much about. 
 The threats I am referring to  are directed not just against the security of our societies, but against the  values that define who we are and who we hope to be. 
 They are threats to the  universal principles of freedom, of democracy, of the rule of law—threats to the  fundamental human rights that we believe are not just cherished by, but endowed  to everyone on earth. 
 I do not need to tell you about  the nature of these threats. I do not need to tell you about the regime in  Iran—about its determination to acquire nuclear weapons, about its sponsorship  of terrorism, about its repression of its own citizens.  
 I do not need to tell you about  Al Qaeda and Hezbollah and Hamas—about their addiction to violence, about their  pathological hatred of America and Israel, about their ambitions for conquest.  
 And I do not need to tell you  about the fanatical ideology that links these different groups—the ideology of  Islamist extremism, a totalitarian ideology as violent and vicious as the  fascism and communism we Americans and our allies fought and defeated in the  last century. 
 I do not need to tell you about  these threats because you in AIPAC already understand them. That is why you work  so hard and so well not just to preserve a strong U.S.-Israeli relationship but  to uphold the cause of freedom. 
 Unfortunately, many in our  country today do not seem to share that critical understanding of the threats we  face. 
 Increasingly, the debate over  our foreign policy is becoming so polarized, so partisan, so bound up in the  battles we are having here in Washington, that it seems blind to the real battle  outside of America, the challenge of our time from the Islamist extremists who  want to destroy us all, who attacked America on September 11, 2001, and intend  to do so again. 
 In this regard, if I may have a  point of personal privilege, as we say in the Senate, I'd like to talk with you  about my own experience over the past year. 
 First, let me again say thank  you. Your support helped me win an election, and even more importantly, to  continue the fight for the principles and policies we believe in.  
 I don't think it's any secret  that much of my fight for reelection was about the war in Iraq.  
 Given all the mistakes made in  Iraq, all of the setbacks and disappointments, I understand how well-intentioned  people have come to disagree about the war. 
 I also understand the  frustration and exhaustion that so many people feel about Iraq, the desire just  to throw up our hands and say, "Enough." 
 But I continue to believe that  a withdrawal from Iraq, as many are now urging, would be a victory for Iran and  Al Qaeda and the cause of Islamist extremism, and a catastrophic defeat for the  United States and all who desire peace and security and freedom in the Middle  East and here at home. 
 We are now implementing a new  plan for success in Iraq, with new troops under a new commander. That is why I  have called for a six-month truce in the political wars in Washington to give  that new plan, those new troops, and that new commander a chance to succeed. And  I call on all who care about security and peace in the Middle East, and security  from terrorism here at home, to do the same. 
 Our fate is now inextricably  linked to Iraq's. And our divisions cannot be allowed to become so deep that we  cannot find unity in the face of Islamist extremism. Suicide bombers who kill  civilians to make a political statement should not be allowed to triumph—in New  York or Tel Aviv or Samarra. We must stand strong and united against  barbarism—and, with your help, we will. 
 I understand the anger about  Iraq, but I am deeply troubled by how this anger, and the feelings of animosity  that many people have for President Bush, have begun to affect the way we talk  and think about what is happening in the world beyond Iraq and America's role in  it. 
 There is something profoundly  wrong when opposition to the war in Iraq seems to inspire greater passion than  opposition to Islamist extremism. 
 There is something profoundly  wrong when there is so much distrust of our intelligence community that some  Americans doubt the plain and ominous facts about the threat to us posed by  Iran. 
 And there is something  profoundly wrong when, in the face of attacks by radical Islam, we think we can  find safety and stability by pulling back, by talking to and accommodating our  enemies, and abandoning our friends and allies. 
 Some of this wrong-headed  thinking about the world is happening because we're in a political climate  where, for many people, when George Bush says "yes," their reflex reaction is to  say "no." 
 That is unacceptable.  
 It's time to step back and  start thinking together about our national interest again, to say "yes" when we  agree and "no" when we don't, and to find ways to disagree without dividing  ourselves from one another. 
 It's time to step back and  remember that there is a real enemy out there—an enemy violently opposed to  human rights and women's rights and gay rights and the basic political rights of  each one of us. 
 It's time to step back and see  that America's interests lie with the interests of free people everywhere, and  that the response to radical Islam is not to abandon them but to stand with  them—whether they are in Baghdad or Teheran or Jerusalem.  
 And that is precisely why I  believe AIPAC's mission is more important today than ever before. Your  organization embodies an ideal that in the struggle for the defense of freedom,  we are not Democrats or Republicans—we are Americans, we are citizens of the  same world. 
 I know some people do not  appreciate just how deeply American your organization is. They attack AIPAC as  if it were an external force in our body politic—an "Israel lobby."  
 These people are outrageously  wrong. AIPAC is an American lobby, fighting for the best ideals, values, and  interests that the United States of America and Israel share.  
 In supporting the U.S.-Israeli  relationship, AIPAC has been internationalist, strong, and nonpartisan. That is  precisely what America's foreign policy—and our domestic political debates about  it—desperately needs to be right now: internationalist, strong, and  non-partisan—not isolationist, weak, and partisan. 
 You have an opportunity and an  imperative here in Washington this week—to combat the partisanship that  threatens to elevate party interests over the national interest—to fight the  fallacy that we can withdraw from the fight against radical Islam and make peace  by sweet-talking people who shout "Death to America" and call for the  destruction of Israel. That has never worked, and it will never work.  
 I want each of you here today  to recognize that you are on the frontlines of this war. It is a war for  security but also a war about ideas. In your meetings on Capitol Hill, in your  discussions when you return home to your communities across America, I ask you  to be proud of what you stand for, of what you are doing, and of the ideas and  the organization you represent. 
 And when you are challenged  about your beliefs, do not let the charges go unanswered. Do not shy from this  fight. Do not retreat from the battlefield of ideas. 
 You know that the struggle for  freedom is indivisible. You know that freedom itself is indivisible.  
 That is why we stand united—as  Americans, as Israelis, as children of God, as children of freedom.  
 The esteemed historian of the  Middle East, Bernard Lewis, was in Washington this past week. He said that, when  he looks at the world today and the threats we face, it reminds him of the  1930s—and that he hears far more voices that sound like Chamberlain than like  Churchill. 
 And so I challenge each of you  to find the voice of Churchill inside yourself, and let it be heard this week on  Capitol Hill and throughout the nation in the days and years ahead.  
 Stand up for your arguments.  Stand up for your principles. Stand up for your values.  
 Stand up for America. Stand up  for Israel. Stand up for freedom. And have confidence that in the end, our cause  will, with God's help, prevail. 
 Thank you so much.  
 