Thank you, Chair and members of this committee, for the invitation to speak with you today for your study on transparency at the Department of National Defence.
I'm the national coordinator of the International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group, a coalition of 45 Canadian organizations that, since 2002, has worked to address the impact of national security and anti-terrorism laws on civil liberties in Canada and internationally.
As you can imagine, working in this field has meant that we often come up against issues of secrecy and transparency. A large part of our work has been to push back against the ever-growing creep of secrecy and the ongoing erosion of transparency under the guise of protecting national security.
Transparency itself is key for accountability and the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms enshrined in the Canadian charter. Secrecy breeds unaccountability, which invariable leads to abuses. This is especially troubling when it comes to areas like national security and national defence, which engage some of the most complex issues and often run the risk of the gravest rights violations.
Given our specific mandate, our work has focused on the Communications Security Establishment, which falls under the mandate of National Defence. We have also monitored recent developments regarding National Defence's intelligence-gathering operations and Canada's past actions in Afghanistan.
While CSE is just one piece of the Department of National Defence, it carries out a wide range of activities, including intelligence collection, surveillance, and active and defensive cyber-operations. As per its mandate, CSE also provides support across National Defence and to other government departments. It also happens to be one of the most secretive bodies, not just within DND but within the entire Canadian government.
Given that our concern is transparency and accountability, I would like to direct your attention to the CSE and DND's relationship with national security review bodies—the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians and the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency. Both are relatively new bodies. Their raison d'être is to provide the kind of accountability that ostensibly cannot be provided directly to the public because CSE, DND intelligence, and other national security agencies work in secret. These review bodies are essentially stand-ins for the ability of these national security agencies to be accountable directly to the public.
These review and oversight bodies are sworn to secrecy and work in secure facilities. Much of the work itself is redacted when it is released publicly. Given all of these precautions, a person would assume and expect that CSE, the Department of National Defence and other bodies would co-operate fully with the review bodies. Unfortunately and shockingly this isn't the case.
Both NSICOP and NSIRA have reported strongly and on multiple occasions that the CSE in particular is slow to provide information, does not provide access to files in a way that allows for independent research and verification, and fundamentally obstructs these bodies in their ability to carry out their work.
For example, NSICOP reported that the departments it reviews, including the CSE, have refused to hand over information based on reasons that are not allowed for by the law, or have simply decided to refuse to provide relevant information based on their own decisions. NSIRA has reported that CSE has failed to establish a system to grant it independent access to information, resulting in CSE staff themselves determining what information to provide to NSIRA, making it impossible to ensure the independence of a review. NSIRA also reported significant delays in CSE providing it with information, thereby disrupting the progress of reviews and violating the CSE's legal requirements towards NSIRA.
We've raised these issues on multiple occasions, but time and again, there has been no action, no accountability, for this obstruction.
These concerns go further than the CSE. It is important to remember that one of the events that led to the creation of NSICOP is the never-resolved controversy of the transfer of Afghan detainees from Canadian Force's custody to the Afghan army, despite credible allegations and accounts of torture and abuse. These review bodies are in place, imperfect as they may be—and we can discuss ways that they may be improved—to help ensure that such abuses cannot pass in secret.
When national security agencies unlawfully withhold information and obstruct and delay reviews, and when there are no consequences for doing so, it poses a grave risk, not just to fundamental freedoms but to the safety and lives of individuals around the world.
My time is limited. I have other recommendations we can discuss.
I'll just leave with the point that both the legislation enacting NSICOP and the legislation enacting NSIRA and the CSE—the National Security Act, 2017—have expired the statutory deadline for review by parliamentary committees. Engaging in those reviews might be one way to further explore ways to get to the problems and address the issues at hand.
Thank you.