National Post

Federal government considers declassify­ing historical spy papers

Memo says allies allow better access to records

- Jim Bronskill

• The Trudeau government is looking at ways to pry open Canada’s neglected national security vaults, possibly through creation of a centre to declassify historical documents, a newly released memo reveals.

But getting federal department­s to unseal large numbers of secret records “will be a challenge without an overarchin­g policy and resources,” concedes the internal note prepared earlier this year for the deputy minister of Public Safety Canada.

The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the memo through the Access to Informatio­n Act.

Canada’s key intelligen­ce allies have policies and practices that allow them to declassify historical security records and make them available to the public through national archives, presidenti­al libraries or academic institutio­ns, it notes.

The memo says the absence of such a standardiz­ed approach to intelligen­ce materials in Canada creates a government- wide “informatio­n management challenge.”

Requests filed under the Access to Informatio­n Act are currently the main means of making security records available to the public.

However, the federal informatio­n commission­er, an ombudsman for users of the law, said that last year almost 20 per cent of complaints to her office were related to national security records.

Timothy Andrews Sayle, a history professor at the University of Toronto, has open access requests for records concerning intelligen­ce from the 1940s.

Sayle said it would be unconscion­able to allow one of his graduate students to choose an intelligen­ce topic for a thesis or dissertati­on. “The documents might arrive seven, eight or nine years after requested, if they were to ever come at all.”

Canada has a rich and important history in the national security arena, much of which remains unknown because of a lack of systematic access to archival records, intelligen­ce expert Wesley Wark noted in a discussion paper for the federal informatio­n commission­er this year.

As a result, the Canadian literature on national security and intelligen­ce “lags seriously behind” that of main allies, wrote Wark, a visiting professor at the University of Ottawa’s graduate school of public and internatio­nal affairs.

Since late 2018, the government has been developing a national security and intelligen­ce declassifi­cation framework intended to ensure a consistent approach to record disclosure, the Public Safety memo says.

Zarah Malik, a Public Safety spokeswoma­n, said the department is working with other federal agencies on finalizing the framework but “is not able to share a copy at this time, as it is still in the drafting and consultati­on stages.”

The memo to the deputy minister says federal officials are also looking at longer-term policy solutions that could involve legislativ­e amendments, budgetar y requests for resources or establishm­ent of a national declassifi­cation centre.

The memo is encouragin­g, but short on specific action and timelines, Wark said.

Without access to records on national security and intelligen­ce, Canada simply has no evidence- based history of security work, he said.

As a result, an important tool for improving the performanc­e of Canadian agencies and for “raising awareness among Canadians of the practice, significan­ce and challenges of national security is lost,” Wark added.

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