A week of terrorism in Canada


If you were to ask most people around the world about my country I am pretty sure that few would respond “Canada? Oh it is a hotbed of terrorism!” This is not to say that there have not been any terrorist acts over the years – in fact many forget that the single largest act of terrorism in history prior to 9/11, the 1985 downing of an Air India plane, was made in Canada plot – but they are thankfully few and far between. We may have just witnessed a terrorist attack on Edmonton last night (more to follow) but there were three interesting developments this week in the world of terrorism that have a Canadian nexus.

As Meat Loaf once sang “two out of three ain’t bad.” But on a more serious note, terrorism is a real, albeit not an existential, threat to Canada.  Several major plots have been foiled thanks to the efforts of CSIS and the RCMP (and their partners) and only two have been successful – two days apart in October 2014 that led to the deaths of two members of the Canadian military. We have also had a few near misses – Aaron Driver in Strathroy (Ontario), Rehab Dughmosh in a Canadian Tire last summer – as well as an alarming number of Canadians who have traveled to join Islamic State and who may return one day to wreak havoc. All in all, however, Canada has dodged this scourge.

Nevertheless, as they say in investment past performance is no guarantee of future return. If the events last night in Edmonton do turn out to be terrorism, and they are definitely pointing in that direction even if the investigation is still in its early stages, we may have been hit by an attack very much in the vein of Barcelona, London, Nice and Berlin. No, this is not the first use of a vehicle in an attack – Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent was killed on October 20, 2014 by Martin Couture-Rouleau with a car – but it may be the first mass casualty one (injuries so far thank God) on Canadian soil. We must acknowledge however that the incident on Edmonton streets may not have been a planned attempt to mow down pedestrians: the culprit was, after all, fleeing a police stop. But the effects are similar.

In the end, terrorism remains a very rare scourge in Canada and is likely to remain so. We cannot panic and give in to fear and anger. We must be true to our ‘Canadianness’, a quality that endears us to so many in the world. We must ensure that CSIS, the RCMP and others are properly resourced. We must borrow from the Brits and ‘stay calm and carry on’.

My thoughts are with the injured police officer as well as the pedestrians.


Saeed K.

Fractional Head of Product/CPO - I help companies build better product teams and accelerate product success. Always happy to chat. Feel free to contact me.

7y

Perhaps including mention of recent right wing extremist (rarely ever called terrorist) activities would help provide a more balanced perspective on the situation in Canada. Just sayin....

Like
Reply
Simon Hutagalung

Expert in International Relations, Political Science/Comparative Politic, Terrorism !!

7y

this is very sad now marseille 2 people killed

Like
Reply
Sheema Khan

Patent Agent. Harvard PhD (Chemical Physics). Globe and Mail Columnist. Author. TedX Speaker.

7y

THanks for this Phil. Our prayers are with the Officer and the citizens who were injured. Great advice, too. We must put our collective heads and hearts together to combat this scourge. My gut tells me that even if ISIS is defeated over there, its hideous ideology will continue to live on. One component must include a concerted effort to counteract this ideology.

Like
Reply
TAHIR MAHMOOD

Scientist, Methodologist, Technocrat, Out of Box Knowledge Based Solutions, Gravitational and Magnetic energy, Norwegian Resource Centre

7y

Thankyou Phil it's very sad to see after innocents and law enforcement as targets of radicalised minds globally. I shall again add my update this morning and should be awakening for our experts to take this matter seriously. Message update given below .would be glad if you kindly respond. Very sad event. Law enforcement officers are front line target of the radicalised minds. I have repeatedly addressed that conceptual subjective non systmatic , non scientific , randomly selected, copy paste contents and non operational tools delivered by the counter radicalisation expertise are full failures. From indicators to deradicalisation, the process is not defined and understood as unwanted dynamic cognitive process that's why every expert has not been able to deliver knowledge based tools but offering only and only experience based and surface analysis.My many comments at Canadian and other LinkedIn members have been very sour in the past but these cases witness that we have to come out of orthadox box as radicalisation process is still running as variables as it's drivers exists in different social layers of society. Hope we learn the reality and stay factual to face this challenge.

To view or add a comment, sign in

More articles by Phil Gurski

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics