Canadian forces in Afghanistan, and whatever location those forces are directed to by the Canadian Government to protect Canada at home and its interests around the world, should be supported with intelligence sources that are directly focused on Canada's security needs and objectives.
Foreign intelligence is more than identifying and taking counter-terrorism defence actions. Aaron Shull, a law school graduate who also holds a master's degree in international affairs helps put into perspective the meaning of foreign intelligence vs. The meaning of security intelligence services (Campbell, 13).
"The difference in this country (Canada) is that we separate foreign intelligence and security intelligence. Security intelligence relates to threats against security of Canada and foreign intelligence relates to everything else -- political, economic, and trade-related intelligence (13)."
Shull is looking at these definitions in terms of Justice Blanchard's ruling, but also the notion that security intelligence and foreign intelligence are perceived as two separate functions has long been the perception of the Canadian Government since it relied largely upon outside agencies for the bulk of its foreign intelligence (13). The difference is perhaps the way in which what should operate as two separate bodies of intelligence gathering sources do with the information they receive.
In a Center for International Policy briefing in 2009, Daniel Livermore points out that ninety percent of foreign intelligence comes from non-classified reporting sources (2). While many might use this as an argument against creating a separate foreign intelligence agency, contending that the lines between foreign and domestic security have been "blurred (Jackson 2009, 149), it is in actuality an argument for the creation of a separate foreign intelligence agency. The credibility of foreign intelligence gathering, that which makes it reliable as a tool for anti-terrorism and counter-intelligence and counter-terrorism responses taken by a country, rests on the analysis of the information that is gathered from the non-classified sources, and classified sources too. Analysis of the information is integral to understanding what level of threat exists and in what form it exists: political, economic, trade-related espionage, or clandestine operations with the intent to bring about an internal disruption of infrastructure. In terms of anti-terrorism, the analysis involves sorting through massive amounts of information, comparing information, and sifting out misinformation which is put out on non-classified networks to deliberately confuse and mislead intelligence agencies. The information gathered by the foreign intelligence agency should be analyzed in a different agency from the security intelligence gathering, and in fact be provided to the security agency only after it has been analyzed and assessed as to the existing threat within the Canadian borders. There is certainly a link that must exist between the two agency operations, but not one which is blurred or obscured by function. The foreign intelligence agency would have by way of its distinct and separate mandate the ability to function in foreign territories, and to act covertly or overtly to mitigate and minimize the threat to Canada within its borders (Kott No Date, 88 of 90). The foreign intelligence agency would have the authority in its mandate to operate at a distance, and that is essential to the security of Canada.
Right now, not only are Canadian troops at risk because of reliance upon other than Canadian foreign intelligence with which they must plan and carry out their missions, but Canada itself is at risk because the opportunity to collect and analyze foreign intelligence is done through the scope of security intelligence, distant from the on-site source of activity that impacts Canada's domestic security. Jackson says:
"The CSIS Act of 1984, which lays out CSIS's authorities, is ambiguous in some respects, and this has caused confusion and legal debate in the evolving security climate. It gives the agency the authority to investigate threats "within or relating to Canada" but elsewhere explicitly restricts the gathering of information about foreign states (149)."
A merged agency of interests foreign and domestic would not serve to illuminate the mandates should a foreign component be added to the CSIS by way of updating its mandate, but would only serve to create more confusion and more legal debate that could delay and be the source of risk to Canada as the emerging combination of mandates would be subject to even greater legal debate and challenge. Thus, valuable time in creating the network of a separate foreign intelligence agency network of sources and function that could serve Canada's overall security in the best way possible would be delayed. The extent to which sources and contacts and valuable information that might be lost to Canada by acting sooner rather than later cannot be measured. What is...
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