Ladies and gentlemen, I will give my presentation in English, but I can answer any of your questions in either official language.
Mr. Chair, distinguished members of the committee.
I have entitled my intervention “Peace, Order and Good Government: Parliamentary supremacy as the ultimate sovereign constitutional responsibility”.
There is a ubiquitous claim that Canada does not have a foreign intelligence service. This is a misunderstanding of Canada’s security intelligence community. Given the legislated limitations on Canadian security intelligence's areas of operations or AOR, beyond Canada—CSIS' areas of operations beyond Canada—one might say that Canada does not have a human foreign intelligence service, certainly not one of the scope of the human services operated by some of our key allies, especially in the Five Eyes—CIA, MI5, and ASIS, the Australian Secret Intelligence Service.
Canada has a foreign signals intelligence service, the Communications Security Establishment, and a good and respected one at that. Canada has compensated for AOR limitations on CSIS in several important ways.
Two of the key mechanisms had been under specific conditions. First, the exchange of certain human intelligence information on certain Canadian citizens and residents—and some other individuals with a direct bearing on Canada and Canadian interest—with allied foreign HUMINT services, in general, and with the three aforementioned Five Eyes partners, in particular. The New Zealand Security Intelligence Service, similar to CSIS, does not have a broad foreign human intelligence mandate akin to that of the U.S., U.K., and Australia.
Second, under specific conditions, the exchange of signals intelligence on certain Canadian citizens and residents—and some other individuals with a direct bearing on Canada and Canadian interest—with CSE, the Communications Security Establishment.
As reported widely in the media, including The Globe and Mail in November 2014, Justice Richard Mosley of the superior court of Canada found that CSIS had not been sufficiently open about all the surveillance alliances it planned to form. Five years ago CSIS had persuaded him to sign off on a foundational eavesdropping warrant to extend its reach outside Canada. Judge Mosley learned the full extent of the information sharing between Canadian spy agencies and foreign allies after reading the watchdogs’ public reports.
His ruling indicates he had never been told of this by Canada’s intelligence agencies during five years of secret hearings. He took the extraordinary step of reopening a case he had settled in 2009. In the November 2013 ruling he rebuked CSIS and the Communications Security Establishment for breaching their duty of candour to his court. A statement released by the court added that, despite perceptions to the contrary, “the Court considers it necessary to state that the use of ‘the assets of the Five Eyes community’ is not authorized under any warrant issued.”
The case appears to be related to concerns about one particular instance where CSIS failed to disclose to the court one specific piece of information about a certain individual. The result of Justice Mosley’s decision has been to blind CSIS once Canadians or non-Canadians with court-authorized surveillance leave the country.
The merits of Judge Mosley's decision, with respect to that particular instance of disclosure to the court aside, raises at least two fundamental issues. First, in light of at least 130 Canadian extremist travellers who have left the country as reported in testimony before this committee by the Director of CSIS, and another at least 80 returnees, this is problematic. CSIS now has trouble following extremist travellers and their activities outside of the country. This has second-order effects with respect to its ability to provide timely and accurate advice to the administrative branch of government and the political executive to which it reports, and the ability to liaise tactically with criminal intelligence and enforcement agencies, notably the RCMP and CBSA.
Second, what is and should be the purview of judicial supremacy with respect to matters of national security? The committee will already have heard plenty of testimony with respect to the former. I shall not belabour the proximate implications of this point other than to reinforce the point and concerns raised by others about the deleterious tactical, operational, and strategic consequences of this decision for CSIS, national security policy and enforcement, and Canada’s political executive ability to make informed decisions with respect to public safety and Canada’s national interest.
The second point, by contrast, has more distal implications. Canada is a democracy. Its ideological foundations are premised on those of small-L liberalism; that is, limited state intervention in people’s lives with a core value of freedom and subsidiary values of equality and justice. One of the hallmarks of this type of democracy is the rule of law and an independent and impartial judiciary. By virtue of being in this room we are all agreed on these basic principles that underlie Canada’s Westminster constitutional monarchical system.
Constitutionally, Canada balances the premise of limited state intervention with a small-C conservative ideological premise about the role of the state, in general, and about the role of the federal government, in particular. Quoting from the preamble of section 91 of the British North America Act:
It shall be lawful for the Queen, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate and House of Commons, to make Laws for the Peace, Order, and good Government of Canada, in relation to all Matters not coming within the Classes of Subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to the Legislatures of the Provinces.
For our purposes at least two observations follow.
Insofar as security is demonstrably of national concern, it falls within the purview of the federal government. Such is the case in terms of national security intelligence and its interactions with foreign security intelligence entities.
Second, the federal government has an overarching duty to ensure the peace, order, and good government of Canada. That is, the federal government has inherent obligations for the collective security of Canadian society.
What exactly POGG denotes has been defined and circumscribed by both the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council and the Supreme Court of Canada and shall not detain us here. Suffice it to say that Canada’s Constitution imposes limits on judicial supremacy.
Unlike Americans, Canadians are not inherently skeptical and mistrusting of their government. This is readily demonstrable empirically in terms of polling.
I shall skip over this section and it can be read into the record at a later time.
[See appendix]
My point here is that people may have concerns about particular issues, but by and large, confidence in our security institutions and the federal government's handling of national security is very high.
The security sector, of course, is one form of government intervention. One might argue that it is actually the ultimate form of government intervention precisely because it empowers the government to curtail freedoms in pretty dramatic ways. Critics like to cite the case of Mahar Arar. As tragic as that case may be, a single case does not make a pattern. To the contrary, it demonstrates the learning effects in our security sector by virtue of the fact that a case like Arar’s would be highly unlikely to recur given the changes in policies now in place. Moreover, it is public knowledge that intelligence from the Arar case came from the RCMP and not from CSIS. And so to be sure, there are other cases where judges have had certain questions about CSIS evidence but none of this has called into question the professionalism and lawful conduct of the organization. Similarly, CSE’s watchdog has repeatedly affirmed the lawful and professional conduct of its activities.
So where does the skepticism arise?
It appears to be driven by a curiously denatured interpretation of the Canadian Constitution since the introduction of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that somehow the sole and primary purpose of the Constitution is somehow to limit government intervention in the lives of citizens. The result of this interpretation would have it that privacy, civil liberties, and due process, as well as judicial supremacy, should trump any and all other considerations. As someone who has published on Canadian constitutional politics, the conventional view is that of the Constitution that actually enables government to do good in people’s lives, at least when it comes to fundamental obligations such as peace, order, and good government.
At times, that means having to balance considerations of due process with those of public safety and national interest. Confidential informants may be an anathema to lawyers, but certain dimensions of security intelligence would be difficult to carry out without such confidentiality and the trust that we have as a result from our allies.
Again, here, is a section that will be read into the record.
[See appendix]
Allies such as the U.K., France, Germany, and Spain have had to learn to live with terrorism for decades. As a result, their courts and their societies have developed greater sensitivity towards the protection of public safety. He who sacrifices freedom for security deserves neither, Benjamin Franklin famously said. But what about he who sacrifices security for freedom? Freedom and security are not a zero-sum dichotomy. To the contrary, they are complementary. You cannot enjoy one without the other. However, you cannot enjoy your freedoms if you are dead.
CSIS exists at the fulcrum of public security. Critics concerned about changes to Bill C-44 are also the ones who will be first to complain why CSIS did not do more, should an extremist traveller return to Canada and commit mischief here. Overall, they fail to account for the possibility of keeping individuals safe in spite of themselves, that sharing intelligence may allow for intervention abroad to prevent individuals from harming themselves, Canada, Canadians, and Canadian interests. I value my freedoms, but I value my life and the lives of my compatriots even more.
By the same token, with respect to changes proposed to the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act, I believe that the potential for revocation of citizenship imposes an important deterrent against bringing one’s citizenship into disrepute. After all, those who hold dual citizenship have made a conscious choice to divide their loyalty. As a naturalized dual citizen myself, I should know. Those who wish to protect themselves against the eventuality introduced by this amendment have the option to renounce their second citizenship. Some countries make it impossible to renounce citizenship, so the onus is on such citizens to conduct themselves in a manner so as not to run afoul of the amendment being proposed. Canada’s administrative and judicial system would necessarily be sensitive to the revocation of Canadian citizenship in circumstances where that imposes demonstrable risks for an individual’s life. Ergo, revocation is judiciable, and thus has a built-in review mechanism.
The current equilibrium needs rebalancing. Justice Mosley deemed it within his purview to constrain certain types of intelligence sharing activity, but he did so in a somewhat unusual fashion. Often judges will give Parliament time to remedy these types of deficits. Justice Mosley afforded no such opportunity to Parliament. This, in my view, is disconcerting. While Justice Mosley may have been within his right to render the decision he did, the far-reaching implications of his decision could have let past practice prevail for a limited amount of time to allow for a legislative remedy to be introduced.