The Cameron Ortis case reminds us that when we agree to receive intelligence from an ally we need to protect it
Author: Phil Gurski
Phil Gurski is the President and CEO of Borealis Threat and Risk Consulting Ltd. Phil is a 32-year veteran of CSE and CSIS and the author of six books on terrorism.
This past Tuesday, an architect of an extraordinary Toronto 18 terrorism plot to detonate truck bombs in the city’s downtown core was granted day parole.
In the wake of a brutal killing and beheading of a French teacher in October for his ‘crime’ of showing the Muhammad cartoons, a report has come out saying French security and intelligence services failed to “appreciate the gravity of the defamatory campaign on social media against the teacher”. In other words, the French blew it. […]
In what appeared to be a tit-for-tat attack, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) bombed a furniture store in Belfast in December 1971, killing four
Canada has an appallingly weak record when it comes to keeping terrorists in prison
An Islamic State affiliate in Yemen was behind a suicide bombing in Aden that killed 50 and wounded another 70
If you want to stay abreast of what is happening from a national security/public safety angle you need to invest time and effort to find that information.
Suspected Islamist terrorists may have used an artillery shell to damage a Russian gas pipeline in December 2004, injuring 22 people
In this episode, Borealis talks to Terry Chowanec, former head of National Security at Cadillac Fairview.
Self-proclaimed ‘sovereign citizens’ killed two South Carolina police officers in a dispute over land rights in December 2003