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Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up

Neil
Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up
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  • Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up

    Does Canada Care about Foreign Interference?

    2026-02-27 | 30 min.
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    🇨🇦🕵️‍♂️ Does Canada Care about Foreign Interference? | Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up
    This week on Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up, Neil Bisson — retired CSIS Intelligence Officer and Director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network — takes a hard look at a question many Canadians are quietly asking:
    Does Canada truly care about foreign interference — or is economic and diplomatic convenience taking priority over national security?
    Over 30 minutes of in-depth analysis, Neil breaks down a series of interconnected developments that reveal how foreign interference, sabotage, cyber espionage, legal loopholes, and geopolitical pressure are reshaping Canada’s security environment.
    From the federal government’s attempt to withhold classified intelligence in the Nijjar murder trial, to public downplaying of Indian foreign interference ahead of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s visit, to Russia’s expanding sabotage networks in Europe, to China’s persistent cyber espionage campaigns — this episode connects the dots.
    Strategic competition isn’t slowing down.
    It’s accelerating — and operating below the threshold of open conflict.
    🎧 Before you press play, consider these questions:
    ❓ What happens when intelligence used to prevent threats cannot be used in court without exposing sources and methods?
    ❓ Is Canada recalibrating its foreign interference messaging for economic reasons?
    ❓ Could foreign states be purchasing property near military bases as part of future sabotage planning?
    ❓ Why is Russia increasingly outsourcing sabotage to criminal intermediaries instead of trained intelligence officers?
    ❓ What does China’s crackdown on domestic “technology leaks” reveal about what it fears losing — and what it may be targeting abroad?
    ❓ How is it possible that Ottawa has no authority to conduct a national security review on major infrastructure contracts involving foreign state-linked entities?
    All of these questions are explored through open-source reporting, intelligence tradecraft, and real-world national security experience.
    If you value independent intelligence analysis that goes beyond the headlines — this episode is for you.
    ⏱️ Chapters
    00:00 — Intro
    01:45 — Welcome & Context
    04:30 — Nijjar Trial: Section 38 and the Intelligence vs Evidence Dilemma
    11:00 — Canada Downplays Indian Foreign Interference
    17:30 — Russia’s “Trojan Horse” Properties Across Europe
    22:30 — Russia’s Shadow War and Criminal Intermediaries
    26:30 — Google Disrupts Chinese State-Linked Cyber Espionage (Gallium)
    29:30 — China’s Crackdown on Technology Leaks: What It Signals
    32:30 — BC Ferries Contract and Canada’s National Security Oversight Gap
    33:50 — Outro
    🎓 Featured Courses with the University of Ottawa – Professional Development Institute
    Sabotage and Proxy Operations in Modern Intelligence (2 days – October 20–21, 2026)
    👉 https://pdinstitute.uottawa.ca/PDI/Courses/National-Security/Sabotage-and-Proxy-Operations/Course.aspx?CourseCode=S0245&429f5b2a066e=3#429f5b2a066e
    The Psychology Behind Human Sources in Intelligence Collection (2 days – May 12–13, 2026)
    👉 https://pdinstitute.uottawa.ca/PDI/Courses/National-Security/The-Psychology-Behind-Human-Sources/Course.aspx?CourseCode=S0236
    💡 Support the Podcast
    Producing Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up requires continuous monitoring of global reporting, intelligence assessments, and emerging security developments to deliver fact-based, independent analysis every week.
    If this program helps you better understand espionage, sabotage, foreign interference, and national security threats affecting Canada and our allies, please consider supporting the show:
    👉 https://www.buzzs
    Support the show
  • Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up

    Intelligence Conversations with Marc La Ferriere

    2026-01-27 | 34 min.
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    🎙 Intelligence Conversations | Marc La Ferrière — From CSIS Officer to Spy Novelist
    In this episode of Intelligence Conversations, Neil Bisson — retired CSIS intelligence officer and Director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network — sits down with Marc La Ferrière, a retired CSIS intelligence officer, Pillar Society member, and author of the novel Escalating Fury.
    Marc reflects on his atypical 30-plus-year career with CSIS, which spanned the pre-9/11 era through to modern intelligence operations. He discusses what first sparked his interest in intelligence work, his time in regional roles in Vancouver, his experience in training and internal security, and how he moved back and forth between operational and non-operational positions over the course of his career.
    The conversation then turns to what led Marc to start writing. He explains the catalyst behind his first book, an autobiography, and how that project eventually pushed him into fiction. Marc opens up about the realities of being a self-published author, including the challenges, discipline, and creative demands of the process.
    Neil and Marc dive into his novel Escalating Fury, where Marc shares what inspired the story, how his intelligence background shaped the narrative, and how he developed the book’s main character, Zak Power. Marc also walks listeners through his writing technique, how he structures his work, and when readers can expect the next installment in the series.
    As a bilingual Canadian author, Marc also discusses the advantages and challenges of writing in both official languages, and how working in both French and English has shaped his creative approach.
    This episode offers a rare behind-the-scenes look at the transition from intelligence officer to novelist — and how real-world intelligence experience informs fictional storytelling.
    📚 Connect with Marc & Get His Books
    Connect with Marc:
    Facebook: Marc La Fury
    Instagram: Marc La Fury
    LinkedIn: Marc La Ferrière
    Email: [email protected]

    Marc is frequently out and about in the Ottawa–Gatineau region and is often happy to meet in person — which means you may be able to purchase a copy of his books directly from him and get a personally signed copy.
    Where to get Marc’s books:
    📖 Escalating Fury (ebook):
    https://librairielouisfrechette.ca/fr/Produit-24965-Escalating-Fury-Neuf-Format-Regulier

    📚 All available titles:
    https://www.booksellers.ca/catalogue?s=Marc%20La%20Ferrière&sort=pertinence
    Support the show
  • Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up

    Intelligence Conversations with Dennis Molinaro

    2026-01-22 | 36 min.
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    Intelligence Conversations | Dennis Molinaro — Under Assault: Interference and Espionage in China’s Secret War Against Canada
    In this episode of Intelligence Conversations, Neil Bisson — retired CSIS intelligence officer and Director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network — sits down with historian and national security researcher Dennis Molinaro to discuss his important new book, Under Assault: Interference and Espionage in China’s Secret War Against Canada.
    Molinaro lays out how the Chinese Communist Party has quietly built a long-term campaign against Canada that extends far beyond traditional espionage. From political interference and diaspora intimidation, to technology transfer, economic leverage, and covert influence operations, this conversation explores how modern state power is exercised in ways that often remain invisible to the public — and underappreciated by policymakers.
    Neil and Dennis examine how intelligence services operate in this evolving threat environment, why Canada has become an attractive and vulnerable target, and how seemingly ordinary sectors — including academia, business, and emerging technologies — increasingly sit on the front lines of geopolitical competition.
    They also discuss how data-rich technologies and connected systems are changing the espionage landscape, blurring the lines between commerce, infrastructure, and intelligence collection.
    This is a wide-ranging, grounded discussion that connects history, intelligence tradecraft, and present-day national security realities — and offers Canadians a clearer understanding of the pressures being applied to Canada today.
    📘 Dennis Molinaro is the author of Under Assault: Interference and Espionage in China’s Secret War Against Canada.
    🎧 If you enjoy in-depth intelligence conversations like this, be sure to follow Intelligence Conversations and Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up for ongoing analysis and insight.
    🇨🇦 Stay curious, stay informed, and stay safe.
    Support the show
  • Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up

    Russia Expels Brit Dip for Spying

    2026-01-17 | 43 min.
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    🇷🇺🕵️ Russia Expels Brit Diplomat for Spying | Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up
    This week on Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up, Neil Bisson — retired CSIS intelligence officer and Director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network — breaks down a series of developments that reveal how espionage, sabotage, foreign interference, and terrorism are increasingly interconnected across today’s global threat environment.
    From Chinese intelligence recruitment inside the U.S. Navy, to Russia’s expanding use of disposable agents for sabotage across Europe, to the public expulsion of a British diplomat accused of spying, this episode exposes how state competition is now being fought simultaneously through insiders, proxies, and intelligence confrontation.
    But the core focus of this episode is Russia’s expulsion of a British diplomat from Moscow — and what it tells us about the intensifying counterintelligence conflict between Russia and the West.
    🎧 Before you hit play, consider these questions:
    ❓ How vulnerable are Western militaries to insider recruitment by hostile intelligence services?
    ❓ What does Russia’s growing use of “disposable agents” tell us about the future of sabotage and hybrid warfare?
    ❓ Why do diplomatic expulsions matter far beyond symbolic politics?
    ❓ What does an alleged state-linked organized crime network operating in Canada mean for sovereignty and community safety?
    ❓ How are terrorist designations and military espionage cases reshaping today’s counterterrorism and counterintelligence landscape?
    These questions — and many more — are explored through open-source reporting, intelligence tradecraft, and real-world national security experience throughout the episode.
    If you value serious, independent intelligence analysis that goes beyond headlines, consider supporting the podcast on Buzzsprout.
    ⏱️ Chapters
    00:00 — Intro
    01:50 — U.S.: Ex-Navy Sailor Sentenced for Spying for China
    11:40 — Europe: Russia’s “Disposable Agents” and Hybrid Sabotage
    20:10 — Russia Expels British Diplomat for Spying
    27:45 — Canada: RCMP Report Alleges Indian-Linked Criminal Proxies
    34:30 — Canada: Foreign Influence Registry Controversy
    38:30 — U.S./Middle East: Muslim Brotherhood Terrorist Designations
    41:20 — Israel: IDF Soldier Charged with Spying for Iran
    42:00 — Outro
    🎓 Featured Courses with the University of Ottawa – Professional Development Institute
    Sabotage and Proxy Operations in Modern Intelligence (2 days – February 2026)
    👉 https://pdinstitute.uottawa.ca/PDI/Courses/National-Security/Sabotage-and-Proxy-Operations/Course.aspx?CourseCode=S0245&429f5b2a066e=1#429f5b2a066e

    The Psychology Behind Human Sources in Intelligence Collection (2 days – May 2026)
    👉 https://pdinstitute.uottawa.ca/PDI/Courses/National-Security/The-Psychology-Behind-Human-Sources/Course.aspx?CourseCode=S0236

    💡 Support the Podcast
    If Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up helps you better understand today’s rapidly evolving espionage, sabotage, terrorism, and foreign interference threats, please consider supporting the show:
    👉 https://www.buzzsprout.com/2336717/support

    Your one-time or ongoing contribution directly supports the research, monitoring, and independent analysis that go
    Support the show
  • Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up

    Global Intelligence 2025 Year in Review

    2025-12-27 | 19 min.
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    🔍 Global Intelligence Yearly Wrap-Up 2025 | Terrorism, Espionage, Foreign Interference & Hybrid Warfare

    This special Year in Review episode of Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up steps back from the weekly headlines to examine the national security and intelligence trends that defined 2025 — and what they tell us about the threat environment heading into 2026.

    Over the past year, Neil Bisson — retired CSIS intelligence officer and Director of the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network — analyzed dozens of stories involving terrorism, foreign interference, espionage, insider threats, and hybrid warfare.
    Individually, these stories made headlines.

    Taken together, they reveal patterns.

    This episode revisits the most consequential developments of 2025, including:

    The acceleration of extremist violence and the global rise in antisemitism

    Persistent foreign interference targeting democratic systems

    Espionage and insider-threat cases linked to China

    Russian hybrid and grey-zone tactics aimed at critical infrastructure

    The episode also looks forward, providing actionable intelligence — the indicators, warning signs, and trends listeners should be watching for in 2026, based on what adversaries have already demonstrated.

    🎧 Before you hit play, consider these questions:

    ❓ Why are terrorist radicalization timelines getting shorter — and why are younger individuals increasingly involved?

    ❓ How does antisemitism function as an early warning indicator for extremist violence?

    ❓ Why does modern foreign interference rarely look like classic espionage?

    ❓ What makes insider threats one of the most difficult intelligence challenges to detect?

    ❓ How are Russian intelligence services using hybrid and grey-zone tactics to apply pressure without open conflict?

    ❓ What warning signs should governments, institutions, and citizens watch for in 2026?

    These questions — and many more — are examined through open-source reporting, intelligence tradecraft, and real-world national security experience.
    If you value serious, independent intelligence analysis that goes beyond headlines, consider supporting the podcast on Buzzsprout.

    ⏱️ Chapters

    00:00 — Intro: Global Intelligence Yearly Wrap-Up
    01:47 — Extremist Terrorism & the Acceleration Effect (Global Antisemitism)
    06:05 — 2026 Outlook: Terrorism & Early-Warning Indicators
    07:45 — Foreign Interference: Influence, Access & Adaptation
    11:35 — 2026 Outlook: Interference & Democratic Resilience
    13:05 — Espionage & Insider Threats (China Focus)
    16:00 — 2026 Outlook: Insider Risk & Strategic Competition
    17:30 — Hybrid Warfare & Grey-Zone Operations (Russia)
    18:45 — 2026 Outlook: Sabotage, Resilience & Infrastructure
    19:10 — Outro

    💡 Support the Podcast

    Producing Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up requires continuous monitoring of open-source reporting, detailed research, and careful analysis to deliver clear, accurate, and independent intelligence insight every week.

    If you find value in this work, please consider supporting the podcast:
    👉 https://www.buzzsprout.com/2336717/support

    Your one-time or ongoing contribution directly supports the research, analysis, and independence of the Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up.
    Support the show

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Om Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap up

Welcome to the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network Podcast, where real-world intelligence expertise meets insightful analysis. Join your host, Neil Bisson, a former Intelligence Officer with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, for a weekly deep dive into the world of espionage, national security, foreign interference, terrorism, and all matters spy and intelligence related.With over 25 years of experience in intelligence and law enforcement, both domestically and internationally, Neil Bisson brings a unique perspective to the table. From hunting spies and terrorists to recruiting and managing human sources, he's seen it all.Each episode, Neil Bisson, Director of Global Intelligence Knowledge Network as he provides a comprehensive summary of the most intriguing international intelligence stories, dissecting the hottest media topics with professional analysis and insider knowledge. Whether you're a seasoned intelligence professional or simply fascinated by the world of spies, this podcast is your go-to source for accurate, insightful, and engaging content.Tune in weekly to stay informed, enlightened, and entertained. Don't miss out on the latest from the frontlines of global intelligence. Subscribe now to the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network Podcast on Buzzsprout and never miss an episode. Stay sharp, stay informed, and stay ahead of the curve with the Global Intelligence Knowledge Network Podcast.
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