CSIS admits to spying abroad
First
public confirmation: Director Elcock says it has become 'an integral part of
the service's operations'
Stewart
Bell
National
Post
Monday, October 20, 2021
VANCOUVER - Canadian spies have been
conducting "covert" operations in foreign countries to gather
information about threats to national security, the Canadian Security Intelligence
Service admitted for the first time on the weekend.
"Events have increasingly required us
... to operate abroad," CSIS director Ward Elcock told a Vancouver
security conference. "As a result, working covertly abroad has become an
integral part of the service's operations."
CSIS "has been conducting operations
abroad for many years," Mr. Elcock said, but such work has become more
important now that the most troublesome threats to Canada's security originate
outside the country.
"Extremists respect no barriers,
either international or moral."
The admission comes amid continuing calls
in the Commons and elsewhere for Ottawa to consider creating a foreign
intelligence service like the CIA to operate secretly around the world,
gathering information on terrorist groups. In the past, Mr. Elcock has
responded to such proposals by saying a new foreign spy service is unnecessary
because CSIS is already capable of working internationally and that it gets
foreign intelligence from its allies.
CSIS has never before confirmed publicly
what it said this weekend -- that its agents have been running covert spy
missions in other countries, and that such operations have become a central
part of the agency's work.
The statement came Friday night in Mr.
Elcock's speech to the Canadian Association of Security Intelligence Studies,
but it was initially muddied by uncertainty over exactly what he had said.
Several people in the audience of intelligence academics and government
security officials thought he had said CSIS was working "covertly"
abroad, but the text of his address said "overtly."
Senior officials told the National Post,
however, that the version of the speech posted on the CSIS Internet site
contained a typo, and that Mr. Elcock had indeed said the agency was conducting
"covert" foreign operations, although they insisted that should not
come as a surprise.
"Canadian efforts to collect
information covertly abroad go back at least to Sir John A. Macdonald's orders
to infiltrate Fenian groups in the United States."
As international Islamic terrorism has
become the preoccupation of CSIS, replacing Cold War espionage and the threat
of domestic extremists such as Quebec separatists, the information Canadian
intelligence agents seek has been found increasingly on foreign soil.
Most of the terrorists who operate within
Canada or have plotted attacks against the country are members of networks that
span many countries, and they often travel widely for training or to meet with
associates.
"The centre of gravity of threats to
the security of Canada has shifted.... This emerging challenge needs to be met
with the full force of the law, and that is what we are doing" Mr. Elcock
said.
Canadian intelligence agents are strictly
forbidden from spying on foreign governments outside Canada, but they are
allowed to gather information on threats to national security.
The McDonald commission, which led to the
creation of CSIS in 1984, recommended the agency be allowed to conduct
investigations overseas, Mr. Elcock said. "If security intelligence
investigations which begin in Canada must cease at the Canadian border,
information and sources of information important to Canadian security will be
lost" he quoted the commission as saying.
Mr. Elcock also quoted Robert Kaplan, the
former solicitor-general, as saying, "There is no statutory requirement
that the entire activities of the security intelligence service be performed in
Canada. I think that would be unduly inhibiting."
Operating abroad lessens Canada's
dependence on other security services, some of which represent unsavoury
governments whose agents may be unreliable or have dubious standards.
Mr. Elcock did not name the countries in
which CSIS is operating. But CSIS has said since the summer of 2001 it
considers Sunni Islamic extremist groups such as al-Qaeda the main threat to
Canada's security, making it possible it has launched covert missions in such
countries as Pakistan, Egypt or Algeria.
Nor did he elaborate on the nature of the
agency's covert international operations, except to say "the complexity of
the operations we have done has evolved and will continue to evolve"
Al-Qaeda has long operated in Canada. It
has sent sleeper agents and trained terrorists to Canada since 1993 and has
tried to use the country as a platform for attacking the United States. There
has been concern al-Qaeda might target Canada since Osama bin Laden denounced
Ottawa last year for its participation in the war in Afghanistan.
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