National Post

Canada’s electronic spies at centre of new ISIL sting

- Murray Brewster

OTTAWA• The Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent, Canada’ s electronic spy service, is set to play a more prominent role in the war against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, The Canadian Press has learned.

Multiple sources familiar with the plans, speaking on condition of anonymity owing to the sensitivit­y of the matter, say the government is deploying a capability that only a “handful of countries” in the world can provide.

CSE is part of the so-called “Five Eyes” community, along with the U.S. National Security Agency — the NSA.

CSE spokesman Ryan Foreman acknowledg­ed the agency is helping the Canadian Armed Forces under the umbrella of Operation Impact, the name of Canada’s anti-ISIL mission in the Middle East, but refused to discuss specifics.

“While we are proud of our contributi­ons to CAF’s missions, CSE is obligated to respect the Security of Informatio­n Act, and cannot address specific operationa­l questions,” Foreman said.

Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan has for weeks been signalling that the military will introduce a “more robust” intelligen­ce-gathering regime, one that allies — chastened by the withdrawal of the six CF18s — are happy to have in the fight.

Separately, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale confirmed Thursday that the Canadian Security Intelli- gence Service will also play a stepped- up role in the fight against ISIL, but he also refused to be specific.

“We are providing new and additional intelligen­ce capabiliti­es in the region and while by its very nature I cannot elaborate, CSIS will have a role to play,” Goodale said. “It will certainly be an increased role to accomplish larger objectives.”

The defence conference where Goodale and Sajjan were speaking heard Thursday about how CSIS agents cultivated human sources in Afghanista­n.

But CSE played a pivotal role alongside the Canadian Army during the Afghan war, providing by its own admission half of the crucial battlefiel­d intelligen­ce on Taliban militants, their movements and the locations of key commanders.

The informatio­n was used to plan military operations and for targeted capture or kill missions by special forces. But one official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Canadians would provide targeting only and not take part in any “direct action.”

Although he’s been eager to trumpet the “doubling” of the intelligen­ce effort, Sajjan has been decidedly opaque about what that means, even last week when he announced the retooled mission.

“Enhanced intelligen­ce capability will help protect our forces in theatre as well as those of our coalition and host nation partners,” Sajjan said.

“Therefore, we will significan­tly increase the resources we dedicate to intelligen­ce, both in northern Iraq and theatre-wide. Our intelligen­ce capabiliti­es will help the coalition and Iraqi security forces develop a more sophistica­ted picture of the threat and improve our ability to target, degrade and defeat ISIL.”

What that likely means in practical terms, according to sources and intelligen­ce ex- perts, is the involvemen­t of the secretive CSE and specialist­s from the 21st Electronic Warfare Regiment.

It also means deploying Canadian intelligen­ce officers into the highly secure all-source intelligen­ce centre in Kuwait, and potentiall­y hacking ISIL computers and smartphone­s.

Sajjan refused to discuss the details. “Unfortunat­ely, I’m not going to talk (about it) in public for operationa­l security reasons,” he said.

“The last thing you want to be able to do is show your hand to ( ISIL) and let them know what type of capability you are bringing in, but we have very unique capabiliti­es for the coalition, and what I will say is capabiliti­es for theatre-wide for the entire coalition and then we have very specific capabiliti­es for our troops in the north as well.”

Bill Robinson, a blogger and expert on signals intelligen­ce, said it is a matter of public record that the military and CSE have an integrated operationa­l model for field operations, which proved highly successful in Afghanista­n.

“It was a pretty substantia­l contributi­on on the intelligen­ce side,” said Robinson.

WE HAVE VERY SPECIFIC CAPABILITI­ES FOR OUR TROOPS.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale confirmed Thursday that the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service
is playing a stepped-up role in the fight against ISIL.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale confirmed Thursday that the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service is playing a stepped-up role in the fight against ISIL.

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