Thank you, Senator Harder, for that question.
I think CSIS came very late to recognizing that violent extremism, particularly from the far right, was taking far more lives than terrorism inspired by al Qaeda or Daesh. Again, when we evaluate CSIS's determination that there was not a threat to the security of Canada, we have to recognize that it was coming fairly late to that game. I'm not saying whether that means they were right or wrong, but I think it is relevant.
Since that time, there has been.... Again, in Operation Hendon, you see in references to the “patriot movement” an assumption that the far right in Canada will be very similar to the far right in the United States. There are certainly transnational dimensions to this that we've unfortunately seen in New Zealand, Buffalo and elsewhere, but I think we need to develop a much more sophisticated understanding of ideologically motivated extremism.
I would expect that to come mainly from CSIS, as opposed to the police. From the lessons of the McDonald commission, police are not trained to have the sort of political skills to do intelligence, and particularly saying when extremism, which I think is something we shouldn't necessarily be extremely concerned with, passes into violent extremism. That's not necessarily a call that I would expect the police to be best suited to make. I would rather have CSIS making that call, subject to ministerial direction and subject to all the oversight that comes with it.
Do we need more legal tools? I think that really remains to be seen. I don't think.... I agree with Professor West that there are lots of people in the security establishment in the federal government who want to expand section 2 of the CSIS Act. Well, you're supposed to do that before, not through interpretation. I agree with Professor West that this is kind of basic in a rule of law state, but I also think this is not something that should be undertaken on the fly. It is extremely serious, especially given the new powers we've given to CSIS to engage in threat reduction. Maybe we need to go back and really rethink the entire CSIS-police distribution.
We also know through the RCMP's institutional report to the commission that it has four different intelligence sections, including on ideologically motivated extremism. The civilian review board is not going to be able to keep up with that, especially when it has to deal with CBSA. I hope NSIRA and the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians are taking a hard look at that from both a rights perspective, that we're not branding extremism as something that should be subject to intelligence, but also from the efficacy point of view, that we're actually doing it with the needed resources and skills that are required.
I'm sorry for the long answer.