Edmonton Journal

Cyberspies look to the skies for security help at new HQ

- Jim Bronskill

Canada’s secretive cyberspies have turned to the people who pat travellers down at the airport to bolster security at their new Ottawa headquarte­rs amid heightened concern about sensitive leaks.

The Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent had the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority — the agency that does air-passenger screening — teach spy service staff how to use handheld wands as well as newly installed metal detectors and X-ray machines.

A memorandum of understand­ing that sets out details of the September 2015 training was recently released under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

The instructio­n came as CSE employees were settling into their new workspaces at the expansive Edward Drake building in the city’s east end — a gleaming facility that replaced the agency’s aging south Ottawa quarters.

The CSE monitors foreign communicat­ions of intelligen­ce interest to Canada, and exchanges a large amount of informatio­n with “Five Eyes” partner agencies in the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

The airport-style screening devices were seen as “essential tools to enhance our security posture,” said Ryan Foreman, a CSE spokesman.

“Although CSE had many security measures in place at our previous facilities, this particular equipment was new to CSE and was included as one of the many security measures in place at our new facility.”

Six spy service employees were taught how to operate the devices and recognize images that turned up on X-ray screens.

The session — provided free — was a “train-the-trainer” course intended to qualify the CSE participan­ts to later teach other personnel about the new equipment.

The memorandum refers to screening of “individual­s entering premises,” but Foreman declined to elaborate on whether people leaving CSE are also subjected to examinatio­ns. “To ensure that our security measures remain effective, we cannot provide any further detail about how these tools are used or how they are deployed.”

Installati­on of the new screening equipment came months after CSE expressed concern about disclosure­s by former U.S. intelligen­ce contractor Edward Snowden, who leaked a vast trove of classified material about “Five Eyes” surveillan­ce techniques.

In March 2015 briefing notes prepared for agency chief Greta Bossenmaie­r, CSE said Snowden’s revelation­s about the Canadian agency’s intelligen­ce capabiliti­es and those of its allies “have a cumulative detrimenta­l effect” on CSE operations.

“Our success is hard won and is dependent on our targets being unaware of the methods and technologi­es that we use against them.”

In 2013, Canadian naval officer Jeffrey Delisle was sentenced to 20 years in prison after pleading guilty to passing classified western intelligen­ce to Russia in exchange for cash on a regular basis for more than four years.

Delisle was able to copy top secret material on to a thumb drive and walk out of a secure building in Halifax.

 ?? ED KAISER / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority is teaching spy service staff how to use hand-held screening wands as well as metal detectors and X-ray machines.
ED KAISER / POSTMEDIA NEWS The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority is teaching spy service staff how to use hand-held screening wands as well as metal detectors and X-ray machines.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada