EXCERPT:
WALLACE: "Olivia, let me just bring into this conversation the elephant in the room. For the last seven days there’s been a pretty intense debate going on about whether the withdrawal from Afghanistan, which is undeniably chaotic, but whether the result of leaving around this 20th anniversary of 9/11, and seeing the Taliban take control of that country, whether that puts into motion the conditions that led to al Qaeda taking up shop in 2000 and 2001 there. It is abundantly clear that the gravest domestic — the gravest terrorist threat to the homeland is domestic violent extremism, that is what DHS has been telegraphing for many, many months now. An aggressive posture toward foreign terrorism and that threat has historically been bipartisan. The recognition of the threat of domestic violent extremism is not even something that most people on the right right now at the national level can even say out loud. It doesn’t even come out of their mouths. How can we be successful in the fight against domestic violent terrorism if one of the two governing parties doesn’t recognize it and agree that we need to stomp it out?"