Toronto Star

CSIS destroyed secret file on Pierre Trudeau

Dossier fell short of legal threshold for retention by service, national archives

- JIM BRONSKILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— Canada’s spy service destroyed a Cold War dossier on Pierre Trudeau in 1989 instead of turning it over to the national archives, The Canadian Press has learned.

The Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service says the secret file on the former prime minister was scrapped because it fell short of the legal threshold for retention by either the service or the archives.

News of the decision to purge the file, which is coming to light only three decades later, has stunned and disappoint­ed historians.

“It’s just outrageous; there’s no other word to describe it,” said John English, who wrote an acclaimed biography of Trudeau. “It’s a tragedy that this has happened, and I think the explanatio­n is weak.”

Steve Hewitt, who has spent years chroniclin­g the country’s security services, called the destructio­n “a crime against Canadian history.”

“This wanton destructio­n cries out for parliament­ary interventi­on to ensure that historical­ly significan­t documents held by government agencies are preserved instead of being made to disappear down an Orwellian memory hole,” said Hewitt, a senior lecturer at the University of Birmingham.

The Trudeau file was among hundreds of thousands the Mounties inherited in the1980s after the RCMP Security Service was dissolved following a series of scandals.

In a bid to uncover subversive­s out to disrupt the establishe­d order, RCMP spies eyed a staggering variety of groups and individual­s, from academics and unions to environmen­talists, peace groups and even politician­s.

In 1988, James Kelleher, the federal minister responsibl­e for CSIS at the time, directed the spy service to sort through the resulting heap of files. Some RCMP records — including voluminous files on Quebec premier René Lévesque and NDP leaders David Lewis and Tommy Douglas — were sent to the national archives.

Others were destroyed, including dossiers on prime ministers John Diefenbake­r and Lester Pearson. Still other files, judged to have current value at the time, went to CSIS’s active intelligen­ce holdings.

Security records on individual­s become eligible for disclosure under the Access to Informatio­n Act only 20 years after a person’s death. Until then, even the existence of a file is secret due to privacy considerat­ions.

Rumours of a file on Trudeau, Canada’s third-longest serving prime minister, have circulated for decades. A 1959 memo in the RCMP’s Levesque file indicates undercover officers duly noted Trudeau’s attendance at a gathering hosted by a Montreal artist.

The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, which has long worked closely with the Mounties, kept watch on Trudeau for more than 30 years, charting his path from globetrott­ing public intellectu­al who visited the Soviet Union in the early 1950s through his time as a Liberal prime minister.

The bureau’s heavily censored, 151-page dossier was released under the U.S. Freedom of Informatio­n Act just months after Trudeau’s death in September 2000, in keeping with American disclosure practices.

The Canadian Press recently requested the former prime minister’s RCMP file under the access law from Library and Archives Canada and CSIS prior to the 20th anniversar­y of his passing next year, given that it can take many months to process such applicatio­ns.

The archives swiftly replied that it does not have a Trudeau dossier. CSIS said its records indicate the file was destroyed on Jan. 30, 1989.

In a written response to questions, the spy service said a 1988 analysis of the Trudeau file concluded it did not meet the threshold in the CSIS Act to justify being kept in service’s active inventory. The file also fell short of criteria for preservati­on set out by the national archives and was therefore destroyed the following year, CSIS added.

“CSIS takes privacy considerat­ions related to its work very seriously. We are committed to ensuring that the retention of informatio­n continues to be in compliance with all legislatio­n and ministeria­l direction,” the agency said.

In addition, guidelines and regulation­s set by the archives “are always followed when determinin­g whether CSIS holdings contain archival value.”

CSIS declined to elaborate on the rationale for purging the Trudeau file.

However, when destructio­n of the Pearson and Diefenbake­r files came to light seven years ago, the spy service noted they were presumably compiled at the height of the Cold War with the Soviet Union.

“That was a time when, as some historians argue, the security community occasional­ly saw threats that — hindsight being 20/20 — might seem exaggerate­d to us today.”

CSIS pointed out that such behaviour helped spur the federal government to divorce security-intelligen­ce from law enforcemen­t, leading to the creation of CSIS, a civilian agency.

Historians say that does not excuse erasing security files on former prime ministers from the national record.

It is the sort of practice “expected of an authoritar­ian state and not a proper democracy that values its history,” said Hewitt, co-author of the recent Just Watch Us, which delves into RCMP surveillan­ce of the women’s movement.

University of Toronto historian Robert Bothwell said security files like the one on Trudeau tend to say more about the compilers than the subject of the surveillan­ce. Neverthele­ss, important records should be kept.

“When it concerns a prime minister, it has historical value,” he said. “That’s a pretty clear standard.”

 ?? FRED CHARTRAND THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Prime minister Pierre Trudeau with Cuban president Fidel Castro in Havana on Jan. 27, 1976.
FRED CHARTRAND THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Prime minister Pierre Trudeau with Cuban president Fidel Castro in Havana on Jan. 27, 1976.

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