The Niagara Falls Review

Five Eyes to discuss digital terror

Public security ministers to gather with intelligen­ce officials

- JIM BRONSKILL

THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The ability of terrorists to shield their communicat­ions from police and spies will be a focus for the Five Eyes intelligen­ce alliance at a closed-door meeting in Ottawa this month.

Public security ministers and attorneys general from Canada, the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand will gather with their intelligen­ce officials for highly sensitive talks during the last week of June.

The secret sessions follow a spate of terrorist attacks in England that underscore the internatio­nal alliance’s concerns about the threat of homegrown extremism, including the possibilit­y of attacks by fighters returning from foreign conflicts.

Security officials are worried about the widespread availabili­ty of encryption tools and applicatio­ns that can allow extremists to more easily communicat­e without their phone calls and texts being intercepte­d.

Civil libertaria­ns argue the right of law-abiding people to communicat­e in private should not be sacrificed in the name of fighting terrorism by giving authoritie­s the means to crack encryption or build back doors into security programs.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said this week the remarkable technologi­es billions of people rely on every day — whether it be the iPhone, Twitter or Facebook — are also being used by those who seek to do harm.

“We need even stronger co-operation from the big social media and messaging platforms in the fight against terrorism and the extremism which spawns it,” Turnbull told the House of Representa­tives.

He said Australia would use the Ottawa meeting to determine what more can be done with the communicat­ions and technology industries to ensure terrorists and organized criminals cannot operate with impunity in “ungoverned digital spaces” online.

The first Five Eyes ministeria­l meeting was held in 2013. It provides a chance for the allies to discuss key subjects of common interest including cybersecur­ity and radicaliza­tion to violence. The socalled Quintet of attorneys general has been meeting annually since 2009 to talk about legal issues related to internatio­nal crimefight­ing and security.

“These are countries which work very, very closely together. They share a lot of intelligen­ce. Their people are interactin­g all the time,” said Greg Fyffe, a former executive director of the internatio­nal assessment staff at the Privy Council Office.

The Canadian meeting is likely to address the dicey issue of intelligen­ce leaks, given Britain’s recent displeasur­e about the U.S. divulging details of the investigat­ion into the May 22 bombing at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester that killed 22 people, said Wesley Wark, a security expert at the University of Ottawa.

Wark also expects officials to examine influence operations carried out by Moscow amid evidence of interferen­ce in the last U.S. election.

However, allies are unlikely to openly voice concerns about U.S. President Donald Trump’s disconcert­ing willingnes­s to share intelligen­ce secrets with Russia, Wark said.

“I’m sure it is the elephant in the room, but it’ll stay the elephant in the room, if you like, because that’s really just too political and sensitive a topic.”

Turnbull told MPs this week the effort to prevent terrorists from shielding their communicat­ions is not about “creating or exploiting back doors as some privacy advocates continue to say despite constant reassuranc­e from us.”

“It is about collaborat­ion with and assistance from industry in the pursuit of public safety.”

In Canada, a majority of participan­ts in recent federal consultati­ons opposed giving government the capacity to intercept personal communicat­ions, even if a court authorizes the intercepti­on, and were against any moves to weaken encryption technology.

However, there was “a strong alternativ­e view” that law enforcemen­t faces crucial delays and roadblocks that are impeding investigat­ions, a summary of the consultati­ons said.

Those who supported this view said investigat­ors need courtautho­rized, timely access to basic subscriber informatio­n, both online and on digital devices, to ensure authoritie­s are “best able to investigat­e criminal activity and keep Canadians safe.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said this week the remarkable technologi­es billions of people rely on every day, such as cellphones and social media, are also being used by those who seek to do harm.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said this week the remarkable technologi­es billions of people rely on every day, such as cellphones and social media, are also being used by those who seek to do harm.

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