Lethbridge Herald

Agencies cite spy threat to crucial networks

- Jim Bronskill

Canadian companies should watch out when they use technology supplied by state-owned companies from countries that want to steal corporate secrets, the country’s security agencies have warned them.

The RCMP organized two workshops last March — one in Calgary, the other in Toronto — to raise awareness about threats to critical systems, including espionage and foreign interferen­ce, cyberattac­ks, terrorism and sabotage, newly disclosed documents show.

Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service materials prepared for the workshops advise that “non-likeminded countries,” state-owned enterprise­s and affiliated companies are engaged in a global pursuit of technology and know-how driven by economic and military ambitions.

The materials were released to The Canadian Press in response to an access-to-informatio­n request.

The heavily censored records do not go into detail about specific countries. But the presentati­on does include a passage from a 2017 U.S. government report saying competitor­s such as China steal American intellectu­al property valued at hundreds of billions of dollars every year.

In addition, CSIS openly warned in 2016 that Russia and China were targeting Canada’s classified informatio­n and advanced technology, as well as government officials and systems.

The presentati­ons to industry dissected techniques used by adversarie­s and offered advice on protecting confidenti­al informatio­n and assets.

The intelligen­ce community’s concerns emerge as Canada considers allowing Chinese firm Huawei Technologi­es to take part in developing a 5G telecommun­ications network.

Former security officials in Canada and two members of the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce have warned against such a move, saying the company’s ties to Beijing could compromise the security of Canada and its closest allies.-

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