Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up

Does Canada Care about Foreign Interference?


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🇨🇦🕵️‍♂️ Does Canada Care about Foreign Interference? | Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up
This week on Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up, Neil Bisson — retired CSIS Intelligence Officer and Director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network — takes a hard look at a question many Canadians are quietly asking:
Does Canada truly care about foreign interference — or is economic and diplomatic convenience taking priority over national security?
Over 30 minutes of in-depth analysis, Neil breaks down a series of interconnected developments that reveal how foreign interference, sabotage, cyber espionage, legal loopholes, and geopolitical pressure are reshaping Canada’s security environment.
From the federal government’s attempt to withhold classified intelligence in the Nijjar murder trial, to public downplaying of Indian foreign interference ahead of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s visit, to Russia’s expanding sabotage networks in Europe, to China’s persistent cyber espionage campaigns — this episode connects the dots.
Strategic competition isn’t slowing down.
It’s accelerating — and operating below the threshold of open conflict.
🎧 Before you press play, consider these questions:
âť“ What happens when intelligence used to prevent threats cannot be used in court without exposing sources and methods?
âť“ Is Canada recalibrating its foreign interference messaging for economic reasons?
âť“ Could foreign states be purchasing property near military bases as part of future sabotage planning?
âť“ Why is Russia increasingly outsourcing sabotage to criminal intermediaries instead of trained intelligence officers?
❓ What does China’s crackdown on domestic “technology leaks” reveal about what it fears losing — and what it may be targeting abroad?
âť“ How is it possible that Ottawa has no authority to conduct a national security review on major infrastructure contracts involving foreign state-linked entities?
All of these questions are explored through open-source reporting, intelligence tradecraft, and real-world national security experience.
If you value independent intelligence analysis that goes beyond the headlines — this episode is for you.
⏱️ Chapters
00:00 — Intro
01:45 — Welcome & Context
04:30 — Nijjar Trial: Section 38 and the Intelligence vs Evidence Dilemma
11:00 — Canada Downplays Indian Foreign Interference
17:30 — Russia’s “Trojan Horse” Properties Across Europe
22:30 — Russia’s Shadow War and Criminal Intermediaries
26:30 — Google Disrupts Chinese State-Linked Cyber Espionage (Gallium)
29:30 — China’s Crackdown on Technology Leaks: What It Signals
32:30 — BC Ferries Contract and Canada’s National Security Oversight Gap
33:50 — Outro
🎓 Featured Courses with the University of Ottawa – Professional Development Institute
Sabotage and Proxy Operations in Modern Intelligence (2 days – October 20–21, 2026)
👉 https://pdinstitute.uottawa.ca/PDI/Courses/National-Security/Sabotage-and-Proxy-Operations/Course.aspx?CourseCode=S0245&429f5b2a066e=3#429f5b2a066e
The Psychology Behind Human Sources in Intelligence Collection (2 days – May 12–13, 2026)
👉 https://pdinstitute.uottawa.ca/PDI/Courses/National-Security/The-Psychology-Behind-Human-Sources/Course.aspx?CourseCode=S0236
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Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap upBy Neil