Monday, February 5, 2024

Canada a high-priority target of China, inquiry told

Canada was 'high-priority' target for Chinese interference in 2021 election, CSIS document informs Hogue inquiry.

Canada a 'high-priority' target for Chinese interference, CSIS doc tells Hogue inquiry | CBC News | Catharine Tunney:

February 1, 2024 - "Canada was considered a "high-priority" target for Chinese interference ahead of the 2021 election, according to a top-secret intelligence assessment viewed by the Hogue commission inquiry on Thursday. The inquiry is investigating whether Beijing, Russia, India and other nations interfered in the past two elections, and how information about foreign interference flowed within the federal government. Commissioner Marie-Josée Hogue was chosen to lead the inquiry after media reports accused the People's Republic of China of meddling in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections.

"'PRC [foreign interference] activity targeting Canada's democratic institutions is primarily motivated by a desire to cultivate relationships with or support political candidates and incumbents who seem receptive or actively promote PRC viewpoints,' says the July 2021 threat assessment by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. 'Canada is a high-priority PRC FI target and the party intends to use Canada and Canadians to proactively support PRC interests.'

"The assessment was one of 13 documents cited by inquiry Thursday in an exercise testing the bounds of what the government and intelligence agencies will share publicly. While chunks of the nine-page document were redacted, most of it was readable. Other documents shared with the inquiry, including one about China's tactics, have been entirely redacted....

"CSIS Director David Vigneault was questioned Thursday about CSIS's reasons for redacting some documents and not others.... Another document shared with the commission was entirely blacked-out by redactions. Vigneault suggested it dealt with raw intelligence — some of the most closely-held information in CSIS.....

"The questions Vigneault faced Thursday morning did not delve into the contents of the CSIS documents but instead focused on why and how some information is redacted, while other details are simply removed. Vigneault said CSIS has agreed to a 'tailored' procedure to share documents and will have a specialized unit in place to decide what can be shared openly with the inquiry. 'The intent we bring to the commission is to be able to be as transparent as possible within the limitations that exist,' he said, adding that 'the purpose of CSIS is to have secrets.'

"Alia Tayyeb, deputy chief of signals intelligence at the Communications Security Establishment, said her agency has a similar setup in place for the commission.... Vigneault said it took staff 200 hours to deal with the 13 documents mentioned Thursday. Experts reviewed each and every line, he said.... 

"The discussions this week on national security are meant to set the stage for the next round of public hearings, scheduled for March. Those hearings are intended to investigate allegations of foreign interference by China, India, Russia and others in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections. The inquiry's interim report is due May 3."

Read more: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/foreign-interference-inquiry-vigneault-cse-pco-1.7100577

How did China interfere in Canadian elections? | About That | CBC News | January 23, 2024:

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