National Post (National Edition)

Moscow, Beijing target Canada’s secrets: CSIS

‘Traditiona­l espionage activities’

- JIM BRONSKILL The Canadian Press

OTTAWA • Canada’s spy agency is openly warning that Russia and China are out to steal the country’s most prized secrets.

The Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service, which rarely identifies security threats by name, makes the frank statement in briefing notes prepared for service director Michel Coulombe.

While Canada grapples with the problem of jihadiinsp­ired extremists, the long-standing threat of espionage is also a worrisome preoccupat­ion, the spy agency says in the notes.

“Russia and China, in particular, continue to target Canada’s classified informatio­n and advanced technology, as well as government officials and systems.”

The Canadian Press used the Access to Informatio­n law to obtain the briefing materials, intended for use by Coulombe at a March meeting of the Senate committee on national security and defence.

CSIS spokeswoma­n Tahera Mufti declined to elaborate on specific aspects of investigat­ions, but she emphasized the spy service’s broad concerns.

“Canada remains a target for the traditiona­l espionage activities of a number of foreign states, which continue to gather political, economic, and military informatio­n in Canada through clandestin­e means,” she said.

“States and other entities abroad have interests — political, economic and territoria­l — and will pursue those interests by a variety of means. Some will do so through espionage and interferen­ce, targeting the Canadian economy, strategic interests and assets, societal institutio­ns and members of the diaspora.”

Western security officials have stressed in recent years that old-fashioned spying has continued to thrive in the post-Cold War era — with occasional public flareups serving as pointed reminders.

Three years ago, junior Canadian navy 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.

More recently, U.S. officials blamed Moscow for pilfering Democratic Party emails that proved embarrassi­ng to presidenti­al contender Hillary Clinton when published by WikiLeaks. Russia has denied involvemen­t.

Upon reviewing the CSIS notes, Kirill Kalinin, a spokesman for the Russian Embassy in Canada, acknowledg­ed that “informatio­n gathering is a vital component of national security of any state.”

But Kalinin strongly suggested the United States is the global snooper to be worried about.

After the widely publicized revelation­s of Edward Snowden, a former American spy agency contractor, it is no secret that the U.S. National Security Agency’s capabiliti­es are “unmatched in imposing surveillan­ce on a global scale” through the bugging of electronic devices and eavesdropp­ing on even close allies, Kalinin said.

Two years ago, the Canadian government squarely blamed a highly sophistica­ted, Chinese state-sponsored actor for an intrusion into the National Research Council’s networks that resulted in a shutdown of its informatio­n-technology system for an extended period.

Beijing denied leading the attack and accused Canada of making irresponsi­ble allegation­s.

In October last year, Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying flatly declared that Beijing opposes all forms of cyberattac­ks and commercial espionage.

“This position is firm,” she said. “The Chinese government will neither encourage companies to carry out cybertheft for commercial secrets, nor take part in such activities.”

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