Lethbridge Herald

Oh, those Russians

NATO RESEARCHER WARNS OF RUSSIAN INTERFEREN­CE IN 2019 CANADIAN ELECTION

- Mike Blanchfiel­d THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

A leading NATO researcher says Canada should assume Russia will attempt to interfere in the 2019 federal election because that would serve the Kremlin’s purpose of helping destabiliz­e the military alliance.

The allegation­s of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election as well as its attempts to disrupt votes in Germany, France, the Netherland­s and the Czech Republic, among other countries, makes Canada a natural target, Janis Sarts, the director of the NATO Strategic Communicat­ions Centre of Excellence said in an interview.

Russia is attracted to Canada because destabiliz­ing it would “undermine the cohesion” of the broader NATO alliance. Moreover, it could serve to undermine Canadian policy in Europe, he said.

It would also allow Russian President Vladimir Putin to project strength inside his country by showing that “other countries are afraid of Russia,” said Sarts, who testified last year at the U.S. Senate intelligen­ce committee about Russian interferen­ce.

“The moment somebody can question the integrity of the elections and the election result, democracy is in trouble,” Sarts said.

The federal government has tasked Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Karina Gould with shoring up the electoral system against foreign meddling.

“We are closely following how our allies are addressing these challenges in their countries to see what solutions may be right for Canada,” Gould’s spokeswoma­n Jordan Owens said.

“The government of Canada continues to closely monitor foreign threats, including those that may impact the 2019 election and are working hard to ensure that Canadians can continue to trust in our democratic institutio­ns.”

The government wants to bring “greater transparen­cy” to the funding of political parties and political advertisin­g and fundraiser­s, said Owens.

The government wants social media companies to “address issues related to foreign interferen­ce in elections,” she said.

“They have taken some initial positive first steps, but more needs to be done.”

Relations between Canada and Russia are at a low ebb with the Canadian Forces commanding a NATO battle group in Latvia, part of the alliance’s anti-Moscow deterrent in Eastern Europe following the Kremlin’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in 2014, and the ongoing turmoil in eastern Ukraine.

Russia has threatened unspecifie­d retaliatio­n against Canada for its passage of anticorrup­tion legislatio­n named in honour of the Russian whistleblo­wer Sergei Magnitsky.

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