Spying Games
 
Rafal Rohozinski and Robert Muggah
 
"Gentlemen do not read each other's mail."  With those words then U.S. 
Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson ended the operations of the Cipher Bureau. 
Also known as the “Black Chamber”, the Cipher Bureau was a signals intelligence 
agency that supported US efforts during the First World War.* Stimson's words 
resonate today. Intelligence gathering is a tricky matter not only during times 
of war but also during times of peace, especially among allies. It is for good 
reason that spying is known as the second oldest profession.
 
Throughout history, the exposure of intelligence-gathering has led to awkward 
moments in international relations and domestic politics, especially when it 
appears to have been carried our in the service of economic interests, rather 
than those of national security. Yet economic targets have never been immune 
from foreign intelligence gathering; that they are fair game has been an 
unspoken rule of statecraft for centuries. 
 
And Canada is no exception. A recent CSIS report alleges that upwards of 20 
countries have engaged in economic espionage against Canada. The list of 
economic targets is extensive. Some sources claim that foreign agents were able 
to procure millions of dollars of restricted technologies from Canada's 
civilian nuclear industry.
 
All of this may help explain why CSEC appears to have focused on Brazil's 
Ministry of Mines and Energy. Energy security is a focal point of Canada's 
current foreign policy–protecting this interest domestically and abroad could 
perhaps be construed as the highest national priority. But for most Canadians, 
the events in Brazil will have come as a surprise.
 
Until recently, most Canadians did not know much about Canada's foreign 
intelligence capabilities and targets. For those in the know, CSEC's national 
security mandate appeared to focus on issues that most Canadians could agree 
on: protecting the nation from foreign elements seeking to do us harm and 
ensuring that Canadians who are exposed to insecurity – from Afghanistan to 
Haiti – have the necessary support.
 
Spying for economic reasons seems sordid by comparison. But is it?

In a globalized and hyper-connected world, competitiveness is measured by an 
actor’s ability to match or surpass the pace of markets. And as sovereignty 
devolves from states to corporations and non-governmental groups, global supply 
chains, international finance, and bourses are increasingly distant from the 
regulatory influence of any one nation-state.
 
In other words, the economic security of Canadians can be impacted by global 
energy politics. Things that Canadians seem to care about – steady employment, 
healthy communities, and cheap energy – are increasingly sensitive to external 
forces. Globalization is forcing the question of whether we should broaden our 
definition of national security to include economic issues, especially in the 
energy sector. 
 
Our answer cannot and should not be determined in the absence of a genuine 
public debate. It is not right to extend our definition of security by stealth. 
As the Snowden revelations amply show, citizens in Canada and the U.S. have 
ceded vast powers to governments to pursue national security interests. 
Securing competitiveness abroad may be important to most Canadians.  But it's 
doubtful if most Canadians would see economic spying as strengthening national 
security or as reflective of the national values that we would like to project.
 
National security policy needs public oversight and it needs to be defined on 
the basis of consensus. This may have been easier to create and maintain during 
the Cold War when threats to national security were clearer. Since 9/11, we 
have faced more diffuse threats requiring rapid government action and the 
policy priority has been recalibrating our national intelligence and security 
services to deal with them effectively. But Canadian citizens should still be 
involved in defining the scope of national security interests even and perhaps 
especially when the global security landscape is shifting.
 
Canadians should pay heed to the Brazil revelations. Similar to those of 
Snowden, they signal the need for a long overdue public debate on the focus and 
boundaries of Canada’s national security interests in an interconnected world. 
Informed citizens can make informed choices. But we need an opportunity to do 
so. 
 

* * *

*Historical footnote: As US secretary of war, Henry L Stimson was on watch 
during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. He subsequently oversaw the 
reestablishment of the US signals intelligence capability that today has become 
the National Security Agency.

Rafal Rohozinski is a senior fellow with the SecDev foundation (Canada) and CEO 
of Secdev Analytics. Robert Muggah is a principal of the SecDev foundation and 
director of research for the Igarapé Institute (Brazil). He is also a fellow a 
the Canadian Defense and Foreign Affairs Institute.






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