CSIS Chief Facing Questions About Sharing Secret Intelligence With Foreign Interference Inquiry | CBC News

Politics·Live

The head of Canada’s spy agency and other senior intelligence officials testifying today as the inquiry probing allegations of foreign election interference continues to wrestle with the question of how much sensitive information — if any — it can share with the public. 

In its first phase, the inquiry is trying to define the limits of official secrecy

Catharine Tunney · CBC News

· Posted: Feb 01, 2024 4:00 AM EST | Last Updated: 4 hours ago

CSIS director testifying at foreign interference inquiryThe head of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, David Vigneault, and other senior intelligence officials are testifying today before the inquiry probing allegations of foreign election interference.

The head of Canada’s spy agency and other senior intelligence officials are testifying today as the inquiry probing allegations of foreign election interference continues to wrestle with the question of how much sensitive information — if any — it can share with the public. 

Commissioner Marie-Josée Hogue is investigating whether China, Russia, India and other nations interfered in the past two elections, and how information about foreign interference flowed within the federal government. The inquiry was announced after media reports accused Beijing of meddling in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections.

But before the inquiry can delve into questions about who knew what and when, it first needs to work out how it can discuss the issues in public while also protecting intelligence sources and methods.

Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) Director David Vigneault is set to appear before the inquiry this morning. He’s expected to be questioned about discussing secret intelligence in public.

On Wednesday, one of his predecessors, former CSIS chief Richard Fadden, said Canada should be more transparent about national security intelligence.

“Things are classified more than they need to be,” he said. “The culture, the workload and the tradition in agencies, I think, is to tend towards overprotection.”

The commission will also hear today from two other senior officials who handle intelligence: Alia Tayyeb, deputy chief of signals intelligence at the Communications Security Establishment, and Dan Rogers, the deputy national security and intelligence adviser based out of the Privy Council Office.

Hogue said at the outset of the hearings that she’s on a mission to uncover the truth and share as much as possible with Canadians.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Catharine Tunney is a reporter with CBC’s Parliament Hill bureau, where she covers national security and the RCMP. She worked previously for CBC in Nova Scotia. You can reach her at catharine.tunney@cbc.ca

Follow Cat on Twitter

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *