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d-27922House OversightOther

Canadian security services warn of Chinese influence operations targeting political, academic and business sectors

The passage outlines broad concerns about Chinese state influence in Canada, mentioning agencies and general tactics, but provides no concrete names, dates, transactions, or specific incidents that co CSIS (Royal Canadian Mounted Police Security Intelligence Service) identified improper influence via Chinese entities are attempting to place politically connected Canadians in high‑level roles with

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #020611
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage outlines broad concerns about Chinese state influence in Canada, mentioning agencies and general tactics, but provides no concrete names, dates, transactions, or specific incidents that co CSIS (Royal Canadian Mounted Police Security Intelligence Service) identified improper influence via Chinese entities are attempting to place politically connected Canadians in high‑level roles with

Tags

national-securityforeign-influencepolitical-interferencestrategic-asset-acquisitionchinacanada-relationshouse-oversightintelligence

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152 (the Security Intelligence Service of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police) identified improper influence through community associations connected to Chinese intelligence agencies and efforts to award politically connected Canadians in high-level roles with Chinese entities.’ Today, the view in Ottawa is that China is definitely trying to influence Canadian opinion and opinion-makers but is not making much headway at present. At the federal level, the greatest concern with China has to do with the acquisition, often by legal means, of strategic Canadian assets such as oil sands or major companies. As in other countries, Chinese state actors (the CCP International Liaison Department, commercial entities, media) have targeted political parties and politicians (with a few ongoing cases at the provincial and municipal levels that are being investigated by the RCMP), civil society (through Confucius Institutes and consular outreach), and academia (through the Chinese Students’ Association, China Scholarship Council supervision of student recipients, and pressure on Canadian China specialists). An informal survey of Canadian China professionals (political and business actors) and China specialists (research professionals) confirms some PRC state activity in all these realms. But no cases have yet reached the intensity or threat documented in Australia and New Zealand. In large part, this difference in intensity is due to material factors: Canada is less dependent economically on China than Australia and New Zealand but smaller and less powerful than the United States. In short, while facing similar influence and interference efforts from China, Canada—like the United States—appears to have more effective mechanisms (diplomacy, election funding transparency, foreign investment regulations) than Australia and New Zealand. Indeed, in May 2018 Canada’s security service produced a report warning of the extent of interference in New Zealand.” Politics The Liberal government elected in October 2015 is inclined to expand relations with China at the diplomatic and commercial levels, including with some form of bilateral free trade agreement and deeper cooperation on global issues like climate change, counterterrorism, and peacekeeping. Yet, despite Asia’s rising geoeconomic and geopolitical weight, Canada’s strategic center of gravity remains heavily tied to the United States and the transatlantic world and to Western perspectives. There are significant disagreements in the public and within government about the possibilities, opportunities, limits, and risks of a deeper relationship with China. Media reports highlighting concerns over improper interference include the following: e In 2010, the director of CSIS, Canada’s national security agency, said at least two provincial cabinet members and other government officials were under the Appendix 2

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