Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Burton: Trump’s jaundice does not diminish Canada’s biggest challenge: China

 

ipolitics.ca

Trump’s jaundice does not diminish Canada’s biggest challenge: China

5–7 minutes


Sitting beside Justin Trudeau at that Mar-a-Lago banquet table, Donald Trump’s forced smile didn’t mask the contempt.

A few days later, recounting the scene to a packed auditorium, Trump had the audience chanting when he began taunting Canada as the 51st state. (“I spoke with Canada, and Justin came flying right in because we talked about 25 per cent tariffs. That’s just the beginning.”)

It’s not just Trump. His team, his advisors, the right-wing organizations who crafted Project 2025 — the playbook for expanding presidential power and imposing ultra-conservative values — bristle with disdain for Canada.

They see a freeloading country that lets allies pay for most of their mutual security. They remember leaders, including Trudeau, mocking Trump at the G7. They think most Canadians revile MAGA. They blanche at what they perceive as a lefty social welfare state (mind you, when the starting point is today’s Republican party, pretty well everything else is to the left).

When Trump brandished his threat of massive tariffs for everything Canada exports to the States, he got the response he covets. Within two hours Trudeau was on the phone pleading Canada’s case; by week’s end he flew to Florida for that face-to-face.

Dealing with an antagonized neighbour is difficult at the best of times. Canada has just posted its eighth consecutive monthly trade deficit. Being priced out of its biggest market by mercenary tariffs would devastate an economy dependent on trade.

Getting Trump to rescind his threat will require much more appeasement than having more drones, helicopters and RCMP officers patrol the border for southbound fentanyl and migrants.

Ottawa will need to find the political will to make extreme concessions of historic magnitude. The incoming administration wants things like scrapping Canada’s protectionist supply management system, or finding billions to immediately raise defence budgets.

On the latter, the Trumpists want not just two per cent of GDP but three per cent, doubling Canada’s current defence budget. (They will have rolled their eyes on Friday when Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly proposed a new “North American Arctic” defence framework which envisions a joint Canada-U.S. effort. Skeptics in Washington will see it as a partnership propped up by American military capabilities.)

Some issues will prove considerable barriers to Canada-U.S. reconciliation. For example, it is too late for Ottawa to satisfy the ascendant U.S. Christian right whose support for Israel is unconditional and unapologetic.

But for all the complexities of managing Canada’s most important relationship, Ottawa’s greatest challenge, Trump-wise, is China.

For Trump — who plans to send anti-China hawk David Perdue to Beijing as U.S. ambassador — the priority for foreign policy is confronting China’s “broad and unrelenting” threat to American economic, security and critical infrastructure. Unlike Canada, the U.S. has been taking meaningful steps to counter it. Washington has been active in addressing PRC influence across nine domains: academia, domestic politics, economy, foreign policy, law enforcement, media, military, society, and technology.

In another example, while the U.S. takes actual measures to ban imports of products made with Uyghur forced labour, Ottawa declares that selling such products in Canada is “unacceptable,” but otherwise done no more than token interdiction of these imports.

Evidently, in Ottawa-speak the term “unacceptable” means “we will continue to accept it even if it is morally repugnant because otherwise vested political interests would be negatively impacted.”

Then there is Bill C-70, which would create a Foreign Influence Transparency Registry and other measures to manage national security threats from foreign interference. But, six months after Parliament unanimously passed the bill, there’s still no “independent foreign influence transparency commissioner” — or any movement on establishing a registry of foreign agents.

On this file, the spectre of Canadian policymakers or political influencers having their foreign perks and benefits exposed seems to have paralyzed the government into delaying implementation of this Bill for the foreseeable future.

There is also the prospect of the Foreign Interference Commission, under Justice Marie-Josée Hogue, coming up with its report and recommendations at the end of next month, despite the government itself crippling her investigation by withholding thousands of critical documents. Washington will be watching this closely and will not be pleased if Hogue’s findings are ignored. Unfortunately, Canada’s record is poor when it comes to recommendations of government commissions being carried out.

Of all the worries over working the incoming president, ending the obfuscation and standing up alongside Washington to deal with China could turn out to be the hardest issue for Ottawa to resolve.

Charles Burton is a former diplomat at Canada’s embassy in Beijing and a senior fellow at Sinopsis.cz, a global China-focused think tank based in Prague; committee member of Taiwan-based Doublethink Lab’s China Index.


The views, opinions and positions expressed by all iPolitics columnists and contributors are the author’s alone. They do not inherently or expressly reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of iPolitics.

Friday, November 01, 2024

Burton: A Trump victory represents a dangerous threat for Canada

A Trump victory represents a dangerous threat for Canada 


https://www.thestar.com/opinion/contributors/a-trump-victory-represents-a-dangerous-threat-for-canada/article_80a7b93c-96c8-11ef-9ac1-f37773f08355.html

 

For Canadians, Trump’s return would be a national emergency, as he abandons alliances and changes the reasons and goals behind deploying a superpower’s global influence.

This includes weakening pesky global institutions — the World Trade Organization, the United Nations — which foster diplomatic and economic principles, and equal sovereignty among nations. Trump is also defined by disdain for NATO, reluctance to defend Ukraine from Russia’s onslaught, and an inclination to abandon democratic Taiwan (at least, assuming China offers the right terms).

Could Canada counter Beijing rushing to fill the global vacuum, especially in light of Chinese interference in our own democracy and sovereignty? In Ottawa, Justice Marie-Josée Hogue’s Foreign Interference Commission appears to be floundering as the Government, fearing negative exposure, minimizes transparency in favour of self-interested obfuscation and withholding critical documents.

Against such a troubling horizon, there are actions Canada can and must take to safeguard national security. These include reducing China’s enormous cohort of diplomats in Canada to numbers consistent with legitimate diplomatic needs; giving CSIS and the RCMP resources comparable to how China funds subversion and espionage in Canada; being forthcoming with what classified investigations learn about China’s malign activities; and banning politicians and civil servants from accepting foreign-funded benefits after they leave public service.

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Charles Burton's Statement at National Press Gallery on October 28, 2024

 

 

4 Proposals for Canada's Response to Chinese Foreign Interference Activities in Canada

1. Reduce number of accredited Chinese diplomats in Canada 

2. Allow more transparency over what classified investigations determine 

3. Augment resources to countering Chinese malign activities in Canada 

4. Prevent public servants from accepting foreign benefits and funds post-retirement from positions of trust in government

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Burton: There’s a strong case for banning the import of Chinese EVs

Burton: There’s a strong case for banning the import of Chinese EVs

 
 

Already buoyed by cheap labour, China’s EV manufacturers have received hundreds of billions of dollars in Chinese government subsidies to develop high-tech, attractive vehicles which could flood world markets at bargain prices and devastate domestic auto industries.


But more than suffering fiscal carnage in a price war on car lots, the darker concern is how these EVs — whose advanced software can be manipulated remotely from China — could abet Beijing’s foreign interference, even congesting Western cities and transportation systems as legions of immobilized vehicles suddenly stop working.

There is a particularly sobering realization of the role Chinese technology could play in kinetic conflict. Future wars will not be characterized by bridges being blown up in far-off lands. Technology, possibly including software embedded in cars around the world, will be used to sabotage everything from communications to transportation, health care and food supply chains.

 

China sells its EVs cheaply because of geostrategic benefit costed in; Huawei was typically 30 per cent cheaper than Nokia or Ericsson.

 

Without firing a shot, Beijing could coordinate a massive attack on our domestic stability. It could easily threaten the ability of Canadian government agencies like the Communications Security Establishment to monitor malign backdoor capabilities slipped into software updates on Chinese equipment that extend to millions of lines of code.


This issue illustrates the challenges of balancing economic benefits with national security in an increasingly interconnected world, and underscores the importance of stringent cybersecurity measures in protecting public infrastructure.

 

 

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Burton: Canada's new top soldier needs to protect our Arctic from China

Burton: Canada's new top soldier needs to protect our Arctic from China

https://ottawacitizen.com/opinion/burton-canadas-new-top-soldier-needs-to-protect-our-arctic-from-china

As for our traditionally protective southern neighbour, regardless of how the U.S. political landscape plays out after Joe Biden’s withdrawal from this fall’s election, the days of America covering for Canada are gone. Republican policy prioritizing U.S. isolationism over international alliances reflects the sentiments of millions of Americans. The U.S. military presence around the world will henceforth be based on the costs — and benefits — to America.


So when China or Russia encroach on Arctic regions that Canada has always claimed as sovereign territory — but where we have no physical presence — it is folly to expect Donald Trump to rescue us.


If, or when, Washington slashes its funding — which presently accounts for 68 per cent of NATO’s budget — it is plausible that Canada will not help European allies cover the shortfall.


Canada could begin salvaging its reputation as a responsible ally if we were seen as legitimately trying to make strenuous efforts to defend our sovereignty with advanced technologies and a highly skilled military. To that end, Gen. Carignan should essentially put Canada on a war footing by taking prominent measures to spotlight and confront our crises of recruitment shortfalls and chronic procurement delays.

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Charles Burton: Many know about foreign interference, but no one’s doing anything about it

Charles Burton: Many know about foreign interference, but no one’s doing anything about it

https://www.ipolitics.ca/opinions/many-know-about-foreign-interference-but-no-ones-doing-anything-about-it

Having studied the complex mechanism of Chinese influence operations on Canadian politicians, from both inside and outside government, since the 1990s, I have a good idea of who CSIS is worried about in Ottawa.

My own list includes members from all three main parties. Most have had their photos taken at events in Canada and China, the flag of China displayed prominently, standing alongside Chinese figures with known murky backgrounds.

We are dealing with a deep, serious danger that nobody seems able or willing to confront. Apparently, there things that both the Government and the Opposition want to suppress forever, and we can assume that any information the Government censored from the redacted version of NSICOP’s findings will likewise not be revealed to the public by Justice Hogue.

Canadians need CSIS to show some patriotic mettle and provide the RCMP with any information that could form the basis of criminal investigations into the serious cases.

And CSIS also needs to tell MPs and Senators suspected of lesser disloyalties that they are being monitored, and must terminate contact with foreign agent contacts immediately — or potentially face prosecution under upcoming anti-foreign interference legislation.

Friday, June 14, 2024

Thursday, June 13, 2024

Charles Burton: Canadian politicians, is China trying to foster a ‘friendship’ with you? Here’s some advice

Charles Burton: Canadian politicians, is China trying to foster a ‘friendship’ with you? Here’s some advice 

https://www.thestar.com/opinion/contributors/canadian-politicians-is-china-trying-to-foster-a-friendship-with-you-heres-some-advice/article_7c42ad60-28d3-11ef-81da-575da69ee738.html


China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS), collaborating with the Chinese Communist Party’s massive United Front Work Department, has a two-pronged strategy for turning western legislators into Beijing’s proxies.

The first tactic is huaren canzheng: getting persons of Chinese origin elected to public office, at all levels. Allegations of China’s consulate in Toronto busing in young Chinese nationals to stuff a Liberal nomination meeting and provided false IDs to suggest these youngsters were residents in the riding, is classic MSS — swaying elections in countries with lax democratic processes.

Beijing expects anyone of Chinese origin, as descendants of the mythical Yellow Emperor Huangdi, has an irrevocable requirement of loyalty to China.

The second is long-term cultivation of people who are not ethnic Chinese but who can influence Canada’s policies to promote Chinese interests. It typically starts early in a politician’s career, “spreading the net wide” to support specific candidates, often done through false-front organizations. Those who wittingly or “semi-wittingly” become China’s proxies will often be given free trips to China through “friendship associations”, including the Canada-China Legislative Association.

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Charles Burton: Opening Statement to Canadian House of Commons Public Safety and National Security Committee Study of Bill C-70

Charles Burton: Opening Statement to Canadian House of Commons Public Safety and National Security Committee Study of Bill C-70 on June 3, 2024


Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Burton: At last, Canada is confronting the problem of foreign influence

At last, Canada is confronting the problem of foreign influence

 

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-at-last-canada-is-confronting-the-problem-of-foreign-influence/


In recent years, many China watchers have developed a layer of cynicism, or at least low expectations, regarding pronouncements on China by Ottawa. For nearly a decade, many Canadians – myself included – have been calling for strict legislation to upgrade our safeguards in the name of detecting, disrupting and protecting Canadians against foreign interference threats. Even this spring’s testimony at the Hogue Inquiry, which prompted public demands for full transparency from anyone who influences Canada’s China policy – specifically, around whether or not they have a conflict of interest because they receive money or other benefits from Beijing – left many observers resigned to yet more rounds of “it’s complicated” from the Prime Minister and his cabinet.

While FITAA won’t be in effect for some time, its abrupt promulgation should have a more immediate dampening effect on the operations of Beijing’s agents. Elite Canadians will suddenly realize that accepting lucrative positions on Chinese boards and consultancies will be seen as nothing more than a humiliating moral compromise: agreeing to the compensation, free trips to Beijing and business opportunities will require tacitly supporting whatever CCP foreign-policy outrage Xi Jinping comes up with, and being complicit in genocide in Xinjiang and other violations of international human rights law going on inside China.

Saturday, April 20, 2024

Burton: Canada muses while China’s trolls work furiously to get Trump elected

Canada muses while China’s trolls work furiously to get Trump elected

 
 
Trump is committed to crippling the foundation of American democracy by seeking revenge over the judiciary for all legal actions taken against him; he shows unfettered admiration for dictatorships from Russia to North Korea to China; and Trumpian unilateralism seeks to topple the influence of the UN, WTO and other global institutions guided by liberal democratic justice. This all helps further Xi Jinping’s ultimate agenda of establishing a China-led autocratic “Community of the Common Destiny of Mankind” as early as 2050, and displacing America as the undisputed global superpower.

Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Burton and Seaboyer: We need to stop China from buying influence in Canada. Here's how our laws need to change right now

Burton and Seaboyer: We need to stop China from buying influence in Canada. Here's how our laws need to change right now

https://www.thestar.com/opinion/justin-trudeau-isnt-meeting-chinas-threat-to-our-democracy-heres-one-thing-he-could-do/article_0b1a6710-e54c-11ee-8254-0f4ef6ff58cb.html

 

When Chinese investors acquire foreign companies, they're opening a door for spying. In every Canadian business bought by Chinese money, Beijing establishes a Chinese Communist Party committee — operating in Canada. With every acquisition, the reach of Chinese intelligence services expands. Those Chinese "police stations" operating in Canada were just the tip of the iceberg.

Beijing's intelligence services harvest the data of Canadians to feed AI-enabled apps that precisely guide barely detectable Chinese influence campaigns in Canada.

 With complex technologies constantly evolving, one way of protecting Canadians from sophisticated foreign influence is to stop authoritarian undemocratic regimes from corporate acquisitions in Canada.

C-34, for instance, currently includes a classified (read: secret) review process that allows discretionary rulings by cabinet ministers. Regardless of which party is in government at any given time, this step is clearly vulnerable to foreign persuasion and interference. Canadians need open, transparent processes in determining which investments are accepted and which are denied or have strict conditions attached.

Monday, February 26, 2024

Canada and other U.S. allies tensely envision Trump 2.0: Charles Burton in the Toronto Star

Canada and other U.S. allies tensely envision Trump 2.0: Charles Burton in the Toronto Star

https://macdonaldlaurier.ca/canada-and-other-u-s-allies-tensely-envision-trump-2-0-charles-burton-in-the-globe-and-mail/

If he regains the presidency, Trump’s plan to make America great again includes 10 per cent tariffs on all imports. Canada — America’s third-largest supplier — wouldn’t be getting a bye.

Replacing reciprocal free trade with a protectionist wall would inflict pain in all directions, including for American consumers, who end up paying more for many goods. For Canada’s export-driven economy, the fallout could mean unemployment for thousands of households, devalued stock markets (including the nest eggs of millions of retirees), and internal regional infighting that makes the 2022 truckers’ convoy look like a high school debate.

Concerns about Trump go beyond fiscal. With the world’s second-largest land mass but a small tax base (just over one-tenth the population of the U.S.) Canada cannot realistically defend its massive territory without the collaborative assurance of a united NATO. Losing America’s resources and leadership would be devastating to the alliance’s ability to defend its member nations.
 

 

Friday, January 19, 2024

Burton: Taiwan’s election results don’t ease the sense of looming tragedy

Taiwan’s election results don’t ease the sense of looming tragedy

 

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-taiwans-election-results-dont-ease-the-sense-of-looming-tragedy/

China’s hostility was deepened by the fact that democratic elections were held at all. On China’s heavily censored social media, searches for “Taiwan election” yield a notice reading “According to relevant laws, regulations and policies, the content of this topic is not displayed.”

But what makes Beijing even more concerned is that Taiwan’s new President Lai Ching-te, earlier in his political career, was an unabashed advocate for Taiwan making a unilateral declaration of independence. Mr. Lai toned this down in his recent campaign speeches, professing to continue his predecessor’s less confrontational line with Beijing. But a very plausible danger from this week’s election result stems from China’s conviction that, under Mr. Lai, there will be no “return of Taiwan to the embrace of the motherland” through peaceful negotiation. And China will not stand idly by if it perceives Mr. Lai as manoeuvering internationally to bring about de jure affirmation of the reality that Taiwan is de facto an independent state that is being denied sovereign national rights under international law.


Monday, January 08, 2024

Burton and Seaboyer: China's meddling in Taiwan is an alarming warning for Canada

China's meddling in Taiwan is an alarming warning for Canada  
 


Beijing openly wants the DPP displaced and the KMT returned to power. Last month a senior Chinese Communist Party official chaired a meeting of Chinese state and party agencies to support this end. The upshot so far: lifelike, computer-fabricated videos depicting candidates saying things they never said, or carefully edited clips of politicians saying things in unguarded moments they wish they hadn’t said.

China has also created a network of “Trojan horse” fake social media groups, purporting to support one party or another, that spew fake scandals and conspiracy theories to discredit the DPP. There is also evidence of individual citizens being tracked. For instance, if someone buys an ebook on Taiwanese politics, AI detects not only when the purchase was made but when the person is actually reading it. They are then micro-targeted with AI-generated messaging that undermines what they have just read.

Canada's turn is coming, and we must likewise tolerate no foreign interference in electing governments that guide the country on the world stage. Canada’s election outcomes should be determined by Canadians alone.

 

Friday, January 05, 2024

Institut pro politiku a společnost: Interview with Charles Burton, Canadian expert on China policy

 

Charles Burton on Bill C-34: Testimony to the Commons Standing Committee on Industry and Technology

 

CDN response to Chinese interference? Pathetic and ineffective. / Charles Burton, MLI in Parliament

 

The China Problem - CNAPS panel discussion featuring Charles Burton, Miles Yu at Hudson Institute

 

Burton: Canada must face the facts: China is now closed for business

 

Canada must face the facts: China is now closed for business
 
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/commentary/article-canada-must-face-the-facts-china-is-now-closed-for-business/
 
To mute domestic disgruntlement over the economy, Mr. Xi might play the nationalism card through military engagement in the South China Sea and Taiwan as soon as 2027. As well, the regime has been reaffirming its Leninist core through renewed predominance of state-controlled enterprise over successful capitalists, to the extent that large Chinese companies have developed PR plans to respond to sudden “disappearances” of their chief executives.

Foreign businesspeople embroiled in arbitrary commercial disputes are increasingly denied exit from China until they comply with demands from Chinese state counterparts. And there are ever more controls and restrictions on security of business data, including bans on foreign businesses in China sending information to servers outside the country.

Then there are growing concerns about China’s political stability, as evidenced by the purge in 2023 of the Foreign Minister, the Minister of Defence and a range of senior military figures. This can’t be good.

Burton: China likely to escape scot-free in persecution of two Canadians

 China likely to escape scot-free in persecution of two Canadians

https://www.thestar.com/opinion/contributors/china-likely-to-escape-scot-free-in-persecution-of-two-canadians/article_644384da-7778-5830-b3a6-56483b4a07f8.html

While few specifics are known about Spavor’s claims, media reports depict a connection to Kovrig’s former job at Canada’s embassy in Beijing, and later with the International Crisis Group think tank, roles in which he would allegedly meet with people in China, engage them in his fluent Mandarin, and mine the conversations for nuggets of insight into China’s political or economic affairs.

Chinese authorities, of course, don’t like such activities. One expects that Kovrig and his superiors, both in government and the ICG, would have been well aware that this type of work would irritate Beijing, thus the danger of arbitrary detention on trumped-up charges was always there whenever he visited China without the protection of a diplomatic passport. And so it was.

One particularly troubling aspect of this sort of activity is the risk it presents to people who might unknowingly be sources for these information-gathering practices. Apparently Spavor and Kovrig routinely got together for drinks and sessions of good-humoured conversation. But friendships with diplomats imply that observations shared in a bar can end up the next morning in a report to Ottawa, and on to the Five Eyes. Was this possibility lost on Spavor? Was Kovrig perhaps not as forthcoming as he could have been about the full dimensions of their chats?