Business council says CSIS should start warning private companies of foreign interference - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 12:55 AM | Calgary | -0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Business council says CSIS should start warning private companies of foreign interference

One of the country's leading business voices warnedThursday thatCanada'seconomic security facesexternal threats and called on Ottawa to give its spies the power to share intelligence with private firms being targeted forforeign interference.

Business Council of Canada calls for legal overhaul to allow CSIS to alert companies in advance

Cargo containers are unloaded from the Maersk Stockholm ship with gantry cranes while docked at port in Vancouver on Tuesday, April 25, 2023.
Cranes unload international cargo containers at the port in Vancouver on Tuesday, April 25, 2023. The Business Council of Canada says the federal government should do more to protect Canadian firms from foreign interference. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

One of the country's leading business voices warnedThursday thatCanada'seconomic security facesexternal threats and called on Ottawa to give its spies the power to share intelligence with private firms being targeted forforeign interference.

The Business Council of Canada, composed of chief executives and entrepreneurs in the country's major companies, issued a 19-page report warning that "for decades now, successive Canadian governments have overlooked, taken for granted, or simply ignored the principle that economic security is national security."

The report calls on the federal government to give the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)the power to proactively warn and work with companies that have been targeted for foreign interference. The council also said Ottawaneeds to amend the Canadian Security IntelligenceService Act to give the spy agency more power to "identify, analyzeand disrupt threats to Canada's economic security."

The group which has a long, influential history ofpushing for policies likefree trade, fiscal responsibility and tax reform said it believes Canada is deeply vulnerable inthis era of renewed great power competition.

"Canadian companies of all sizes are increasingly finding themselves in the crosshairs of strategic threat actors seeking to advance their national interests in ways that can, and do, undermine Canada's national and economic security," said the report.

It cited a suspected foreign disinformation campaign that targeted a Canadian rare earth project in Saskatchewan, along with Russian and Iranian attempts to smear the energy sector.

The report pointed toother examples of trade being weaponizedand Canadian business information and intellectual property being stolen.

"It's important for Canadians to recognize that all sectors of the Canadian economy are the subject of attacks from state-sponsored actors," said Trevor Neiman, vice-president of policy at the Business Council of Canada.

"This includes strategically important businesses and sectors of the Canadian economy and these attacks have real-world implications for Canadians' economic safety, security and prosperity."

A new definition of national security

The council has called on the Liberal government to develop a new national security strategy that would,for the first time,establish economic security as a central pillar of the nation's security.

It also calls on the federal government to commitpublicly to spending two per cent of gross domestic product on defence to establish Canada's credibility in the eyes of its NATO allies.

The report suggests the debate overforeign interference, which has been ragingfor months, needs to be expanded beyond its currentpolitical context.

"The current narrative surrounding malign foreign influence is rightly focused on the integrity of democratic processes and the safety and security of targeted ethnic or cultural groups," the report said.

"However, strategic threat actors actively target all aspects of Canadian society to advance their strategic interests to our detriment."

Director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service David Vigneault sits at a desk wearing a dark suit. He is a middle-aged white man and has a focused look on his face while adjusting an ear piece that acts as a translation aid.
Director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) David Vigneault appears before a parliamentary committee in Ottawa on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

The national security community might struggle to wrap its head around the notion of sharing "timely and actionable threat intelligence" with the private sector.

CSIS jealously guards its sources and methods of collecting information. In one espionage case, it even kept the RCMP in the dark abouta former sailor who was stealing classified information for the Russians.

In 2022, the director of CSIS was tasked by the public safety minister with ensuring that"organizations working in sensitive domains are aware of current and emerging economicsecurity threats." In its report, the Business Council pointed outthe agency doesn't havethelegislativeauthority to do that.

Neiman said Canada's allies have found ways to strike that balance between secrecy and disclosure.

"We understand that it's possible for domestic security agencies to proactively share threat intelligence with the business community and they have been doing so for several years," he said. "There are ways to do it."

A 'NATO for trade'

The council also said the law should be changed to allow for "the use of intelligence as evidence in the prosecution of criminal activities, while remaining compliant with the constitutional principle of the accused receiving a fair trial."

On a more strategic level, the council said Canada needs to reinvigorate its security partnerships to counter weaponized supply chains. It's calling for something it describes as a"NATO for trade," which would see allies come to each other's assistance to collectively deterand counter economic coercion.

The G7 began talks last spring on developing a common set of tools to allow the world's most advanced democracies to address economic coercion tools that would include more resilient supply chains and efforts to protect sensitive technologies.

Business leaderswho were consulted for the report told the Business Council of Canada they worry that Canada is being seen more and more as an unreliable ally and a commitment to NATO's often-debated two per cent defence spending target would go a long way toward boosting allies' confidence.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speak with military members about the North Warning System Site in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut on Thursday, August 25, 2022.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speak with military members in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut on Thursday, August 25, 2022. The Business Council of Canada says Trudeau's government needs to boost defence spending to restore Canada's credibility as an ally. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

"Considering the most recent NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, this pledge should be viewed as a 'floor' and not a 'ceiling,'" said the report.

The Liberal government has carefully avoided making such a specific, public pledge.

The council insisted it's not asking the federal government to do anything on security and defence that its allies are not doingalready.

"The Government of Canada has been responding to our new geopolitical reality. But its actions have been slow, modestand piecemeal," the report said.

Officials at the council acknowledge that national security has not been among its major policy targets in the past few decades.