It ain’t easy working for CSIS.
The organization’s mandate is a tough one: monitor and investigate threats to the security of our nation based on “reasonable grounds to suspect,” all while not running roughshod over Canadians’ fundamental rights (freedom of speech, of assembly, and lawful dissent). Not to mention public damnation when it is perceived you have dropped the ball.
The women and men at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service are, nevertheless, a dedicated bunch who are passionate about what they do. (I have an insider’s perspective here, having worked there from 2001–2015). They do their utmost to keep us safe and provide the best intelligence and advice possible to our government.
And while just about everything CSIS does is done in secret, its staff should be able to rely on the fact that the leadership will support and defend its actions when called upon, in public or in camera, to do so.
Until this week.
In other words, CSIS officers did their due diligence, looked into who was who in the zoo, and concluded there was no threat to national security. Dissent, pure and simple.
What occasioned this change? Are there “reasonable grounds to suspect” political interference? Mr. Vigneault admitted that he sought the advice of the Department of Legal Services which is, after all, a Trudeau government body. Asking the very people who said the Emergencies Act was required for advice on whether it was necessary sounds like a foregone conclusion.
This is a sad day for national security in Canada. I am not a conspiracy theorist, but this whole affair smells bad. I do not know who whispered in whose ear, but it sure seems that the CSIS director did an about-face at a crucial point in the inquiry’s deliberations, effectively giving the government a get-out-of-jail-free card.
To my former colleagues at CSIS: I feel for your sense of betrayal. You did your job and were slew-footed by your head honcho. Sigh… Please keep doing what you do for Canada and for Canadians. The country needs you.
As for this nation’s security intelligence leadership: Shame on you!