r/terrorism

This week on the Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap Up
▲ 33 r/terrorism+4 crossposts

This week on the Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap Up

This week on Global Intelligence Weekly Wrap-Up, I examine a series of stories highlighting how modern intelligence threats are increasingly focused on exploiting political division, public distrust, technology, and human vulnerabilities inside democratic societies.

This week’s episode covers:

CSIS warnings that any future Alberta separation referendum could become a target for foreign interference and online disinformation campaigns

Canada’s renewed lawful access debate involving encryption, surveillance powers, and oversight concerns

Claims by the Parti Québécois involving alleged federal surveillance and the broader issue of public trust in intelligence institutions

Poland’s warning that Russia is evolving its hybrid warfare strategy by relying on more professional sabotage and covert networks

The renewed debate surrounding Tahawwur Rana, terrorism, and Canadian citizenship

The FBI reward for former U.S. counterintelligence specialist Monica Witt, accused of defecting to Iran

One of the key themes throughout this episode is how foreign adversaries increasingly weaponize:

Social division

Political polarization

Online ecosystems

Hybrid warfare

Insider access

Disinformation campaigns

Modern espionage is no longer simply about stealing classified documents.

It is increasingly about shaping perception, exploiting vulnerabilities, and weakening democratic cohesion from within.

The episode is available here:

https://www.buzzsprout.com/2336717/episodes/19188292

Stay curious, stay informed and stay safe.

u/Active-Analysis17 — 1 day ago
▲ 17 r/terrorism+2 crossposts

Islamic State massacres Christians in front of their families: At least 60 people killed in attacks across eastern Democratic Republic of Congo

telegraph.co.uk
u/Strongbow85 — 13 days ago