espionage
Retired Army Intelligence Officer says Vegas Cybertruck bomber may be whistleblower on east coast drone invasion
A guest Friday’s “The Shawn Ryan Show” podcast says Las Vegas Cybertruck bomber Matthew Livelsberger emailed him with an incredible claim.
Retired Army Intelligence Officer Sam Shoemate said Livelsberger claimed he was being followed by Homeland Security because they know he’s trying to reveal a high-level coverup of “advanced drone technology” launched by China.
Matt Livelsberger's Email
"I've been followed for over a week now from likely homeland or FBI, and they are looking to move on me and are unlikely going to let me cross into Mexico, but won't because they know I am armed and I have a massive VBIED. I've been trying to maintain a… pic.twitter.com/PQZt87G3Ox
— Shawn Ryan (@ShawnRyan762) January 3, 2025
During the podcast, The Shawn Ryan Show discovered they’d also received an email from Livelsberger. On the X platform, Ryan released the email as revealed by Shoemate.
The suspected Cybertruck bomber said he’s releasing this information to reveal the existence of “gravitic propulsion systems” which civilians have recently recognized as “drones” flying over the US east coast.
Livelsberger says only the US and China have this technology and China is demonstrating that they could use it. He calls these systems the “most dangerous threat to national security that has ever existed” and says “China is poised to attack anywhere in the east coast”.
The entire email reads:
“In case I do not make it to my decision point or on to the Mexico border I am sending this now. Please do not release this until 1JAN and keep my identity private until then.
“First off I am not under duress or hostile influence or control. My first car was a 2006 Black Ford Mustang V6 for verification.
“China has been launching them from the Atlantic from submarines for years, but this activity recently has picked up. As of now, it is just a show of force and they are using it similar to how they used the balloon for sigint and isr, which are also part of the integrated coms system. There are dozens of those balloons in the air at any given time.
“The so what is because of the speed and stealth of these unmanned AC, they are the most dangerous threat to national security that has ever existed. They basically have an unlimited payload capacity and can park it over the WH if they wanted. It’s checkmate.
“USG needs to give the history of this, how we are employing it and weaponizing it, how China is employing them and what the way forward is. China is poised to attack anywhere in the east coast.
“I’ve been followed for over a week now from likely homeland or FBI, and they are looking to move on me and are unlikely going to let me cross into Mexico, but won’t because they know I am armed and I have a massive VBIED. I’ve been trying to maintain a very visible profile and have kept my phone and they are definitely digitally tracking me.” (VBIED – vehicle-borne explosive device)
Livelsberger’s email concludes by alleging the coverup of “war crimes” in Afghanistan’s Nimruz Province that “killed hundreds of civilians in a single day.”
He begs the recipients of his email to verify his claims so the public receives this information without any influence from government agencies. “You need to elevate this to the media so we avoid a world war because this is a mutually assured destruction situation.”
In the Shawn Ryan podcast interview, Sam Shoemate suggested Livelsberger might actually still be alive.
Is Matt Livelsberger still alive?@samosaur pic.twitter.com/szoScNvEyN
— Shawn Ryan Show (@ShawnRyanShow) January 4, 2025
Considering all this potentially explosive information, podcaster Shawn Ryan said he’s “disappearing” for a while.
My family and I are disappearing for a few days. My account will be active but it will not be me behind the wheel. What we are about to release is mind boggling and will raise a lot of questions.
All media requests need to go to my producer @SRS_jeremy
— Shawn Ryan (@ShawnRyan762) January 3, 2025
The full interview, which as of Saturday afternoon has been viewed nearly 12 million times on X and nearly 4 million times on YouTube, can be seen here:
Catherine Herridge
CIA whistleblower accusing government of “Havana Syndrome cover up” EXCLUSIVE Catherine Herridge Report
“Alice” is a medically retired CIA Officer with two decades of government service |
After years of quiet advocacy, a CIA whistleblower is speaking publicly for the first time about mysterious symptoms known as “Havana Syndrome” and accusing the intelligence community of a “cover up.” |
We recently sat down with the medically retired CIA officer – we agreed to call “Alice” to shield her identity -– after a House GOP report found “it appears increasingly likely” a foreign adversary is behind these debilitating cognitive and neurological conditions. |
The Congressional Report also called out the intelligence community for frustrating congressional oversight efforts to uncover the facts. |
Alice said of the intelligence community leadership, “If they’re politicizing this, what else are they not telling the president? ” |
DEEP DIVE | |||||||||||||||
Our reporting is based on conversations with more than a dozen individuals who have explored or experienced the mysterious set of symptoms that takes its name from a cluster of cases, reported in Cuba, in 2016. Though the evidence indicates the incidents were happening much earlier. | |||||||||||||||
The US government refers to it as “Anomalous Health Incidents” or AHIs. A previously disclosed National Security Memo confirmed intelligence information about “a high-powered microwave system weapon that may have the ability to weaken, intimidate, or kill an enemy over time and without leaving evidence.” | |||||||||||||||
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The memo continued, “The 2012 intelligence information indicated that this weapon is designed to bathe a target’s living quarters in microwaves, causing numerous physical effects, including a damaged nervous system.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice, who spent two decades in government service, says she experienced an AHI in 2021. In many respects, her experience mirrors the National Security memo. | |||||||||||||||
Alice, once trusted with the nation’s secrets, now relies on a service dog to navigate daily life. She takes a cocktail of drugs to manage chronic headaches, balance issues, nerve pain, eye tracking disorders, memory lapses among others. | |||||||||||||||
Much of Alice’s work at the CIA remains classified to this day. | |||||||||||||||
While our investigation explores new claims about directed energy weapons and their possible use by a foreign adversary, it also documents allegations of government gaslighting. | |||||||||||||||
And importantly, it underscores credible claims that the intelligence community, specifically the CIA, has failed to care for its own people after they reported directed energy attacks. | |||||||||||||||
A new bipartisan Senate Intelligence report faulted the CIA, finding “many individuals faced obstacles to timely and sufficient care.” The report went further, criticizing the Agency for halting its collection of clinical research. Meanwhile, the Defense Department’s work is ongoing. | |||||||||||||||
“…the Committee nevertheless assesses that CIA may not be well postured to respond to future AHI reports and to facilitate quick, accessible. high-quality medical care for those who need it, particularly in the case of another AHI cluster.” | |||||||||||||||
CONTEXT: THE DISCONNECT | |||||||||||||||
This is an extraordinary group of national security personnel. They are highly vetted and trusted with the US government’s most closely guarded secrets. But after they reported AHIs to their leadership, they say they were dismissed as crazy and unstable. Some officers report their security clearances were pulled, limiting their ability to work in the future. | |||||||||||||||
I complained to an intelligence official about the apparent disconnect. “Either they have the worst vetting system and they only pick crazy people, or in fact, their really talented, very smart, very dedicated people are being hit.” And the official had no response for me. | |||||||||||||||
GOP HOUSE INVESTIGATION | |||||||||||||||
In early December, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, released an unclassified interim report. The CIA subcommittee chairman Rick Crawford (R-Arkansas) was highly critical of the Intelligence community leadership. | |||||||||||||||
“I have discovered that there is reliable evidence to suggest that some Anomalous Health Incidents (AHIs) are the work of foreign adversaries,” Crawford said. “Sadly, the IC has actively attempted to impede our investigation, but we have nonetheless been able to gather significant evidence, and I have reason to believe that its claims of environmental or social factors explaining AHIs are false.” | |||||||||||||||
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Asked if the House report findings amount to a government coverup, Alice did not hesitate. “It’s a coverup and it’s terrifying and it should be terrifying to all Americans.” | |||||||||||||||
The new House congressional report conflicts with the 2023 Intelligence Community Assessment or ICA that found “..most IC agencies have concluded that it is ‘very unlikely’ a foreign adversary is responsible for the reported AHIs.” | |||||||||||||||
“Thank God they’re saying it, “ Alice said of the house interim report. “Thank God they were brave enough to stand up to the CIA.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice went further, “If they’re politicizing this, what else are they not telling the president and that’s scary. That’s where it becomes more real.” | |||||||||||||||
LEADING EXPERT WEIGHS IN | |||||||||||||||
Dr. James Giordano served as the consulting forensic neuroscientist on the original cases of AHI in Havana, Cuba. | |||||||||||||||
“The recognized likelihood that a foreign peer competitor nation can be attributed to AHI engagements is both unsurprising, and validating, given my original analysis of AHI cases in Havana.” | |||||||||||||||
Giordano is the Pellegrino Center Professor of Neurology and Biochemistry, at Georgetown University; and Executive Director of the Institute for Biodefense Research, a federally funded think tank focusing upon global biosecurity. | |||||||||||||||
“I believe that this (house) report substantively validates the research community’s efforts to demonstrate that directed energy technologies were the source of AHIs, and appropriately recognizes those victims of these engagements who have suffered for so long with both the resulting signs and symptoms, and difficulties in acquiring the care and support they so direly needed.” | |||||||||||||||
MULTIPLE WEAPONS – ATTACKS REPORTED DOMESTICALLY AND ABROAD | |||||||||||||||
Alice’s injuries are so debilitating, she relies on a service dog. She needed multiple breaks during our interview. At times, she wore dark glasses to blunt the studio lights. | |||||||||||||||
Respecting classification and sensitive matters related to her intelligence work, Alice could only share the basic outlines of her AHI experience in 2021. | |||||||||||||||
“I was serving in Africa and I experienced an anomalous health incident in my home on a Saturday night,” Alice explained. | |||||||||||||||
“I heard a weird noise. It was a really weird sound that I’ll never, never forget it… and after about a second or two, I felt it in my feet, kind of like the reverb from a speaker.” | |||||||||||||||
In military and intelligence circles, they call it the kill zone or the X. If you are under attack, you need to get off the X. | |||||||||||||||
When she moved off the X to another room, Alice said her partner provided the initial hint something was terribly wrong. | |||||||||||||||
“I went into the master bedroom..and I said, ‘Hey, do you hear that weird noise?’ And the first sign that something was off, I should have known, was when he said, ‘what noise?’” | |||||||||||||||
Alice left the bedroom and then experienced the strange sound for a second time. | |||||||||||||||
“Immediately, as soon as I reentered the space, I heard the noise again. My ear started hurting. I started having vertigo. The room was spinning, my head started pulsing. It hurt so badly and I had a ton of pain in my left ear and my ears started ringing and I thought I was going to pass out. “ | |||||||||||||||
Alice believes there are multiple weapons which explain varying symptoms and diagnoses among AHI survivors from traumatic brain injury to memory failure, balance issues, eye tracking disorders and nerve pain. | |||||||||||||||
“I think there are weapons that can be fit in backpacks, ones that can be fit in the trunks of cars, ones that can be planted at a position with line of sight to people from across the street.” | |||||||||||||||
Based on our investigative reporting, many US government personnel who experienced AHIs were assigned portfolios linked to Russian interests from cybersecurity to election interference and disinformation. Others had specialized language skills. | |||||||||||||||
While Alice would not discuss her work in Africa, she said she thinks Moscow is to blame. “I believe the Russian GRU (Russian military intelligence) came to my house late at night and took me off the battlefield.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice and other intelligence professionals who experienced AHIs describe their brains being fried. Think of a computer: the hardware is still there, but the software is corrupted. You no longer get updates, you can’t connect the dots anymore. System components, like your balance, and vision, don’t work together. We were told some intelligence officers had to learn to walk again. | |||||||||||||||
While we don’t have the whole picture, we understood that many officers who experienced AHIs were on a leadership track. Some privately question if there may be an insider threat. We will explore those questions and others in follow up reporting. | |||||||||||||||
Asked if her old self died the day she experienced an AHI, Alice responded, “A little bit. I was paid for my brain. I was paid for my ability to write well and to write for the president. I was paid to meet with foreigners and to get information that would help advance US security objectives …and I can’t do that anymore the way I used to and it’s really, that’s one of the hardest parts.” | |||||||||||||||
CASES SPIKE IN 2021 BEFORE RUSSIA INVADES UKRAINE | |||||||||||||||
As cases spiked in 2021 the same year, Alice says she was hit, multiple sources told us CIA director Burns said privately that it was his personal belief Russia was behind some of the attacks. | |||||||||||||||
“I think he’s a really good person at his core. I think he was being honest when he said he thought it was Russia,” Alice explained. “He is a Russia expert. He was the US ambassador there….I mean, I think it’s a sign of how political this is that even he fell in line.” | |||||||||||||||
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While an Intelligence Community panel of experts had uncovered evidence suggesting a directed energy weapon may be responsible, in 2023 the intelligence community took a different position. It released a new intelligence community assessment or ICA that Alice and other AHI survivors called a “slap in the face.” | |||||||||||||||
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The ICA reads in part, “..most IC agencies have concluded that it is ‘very unlikely’ a foreign adversary is responsible for the reported AHIs. IC agencies have varying confidence levels, with two agencies at moderate-to-high confidence while three are at moderate confidence.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice said the 2023 ICA did not meet CIA standards.” If I had received the finished paper on my desk as a team chief, I would’ve sent it back to the analyst and said, ’you have to start over again’ It didn’t meet any of our most basic tradecraft standards.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice emphasized analysts are trained not to frame arguments around a lack of information. | |||||||||||||||
The intelligence community assessment on AHIs also stood out to me because the coordinated media rollout seemed designed to push the controversial findings. | |||||||||||||||
GASLIGHTING | |||||||||||||||
Miriam Webster defines gaslighting as psychological manipulation that “causes the victim to question the validity of their own thoughts.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice said the CIA was gaslighting her and other AHI survivors. “It was designed to make us think, ourselves, are crazy and to question our own injuries.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice said she expected more from the CIA. “We swore this oath and every day I watch them really continue to deny people’s humanity and their injuries. People that put themselves and their families on the line in horrible, horribly dangerous places and situations to protect this country.” | |||||||||||||||
Asked if it is reasonable to think that the intelligence community doesn’t want to acknowledge a foreign adversary, because then, they would have to act? | |||||||||||||||
“Yes and it’s complicated with Russia, right?” Alice responded. “One theory we bat around – is it possible that it’s Russia and China? Is it possible that one country created it, sold it, or gave it to another country.” | |||||||||||||||
We were told that even the prospect of a directed energy weapon attacking US personnel was bad for recruitment and bad for employee retention. | |||||||||||||||
While the CIA still questions the cause, based on government records, the Labor Department does accept Alice’s Traumatic Brain Injury or TBI as a “work injury.” Alice qualified for limited compensation through a law called the Havana Act but she and others told us it falls short. | |||||||||||||||
100K OUT OF POCKET MEDICAL EXPENSES | |||||||||||||||
“It is a full-time job to try to get medical treatment and is another full-time job to try to handle the bureaucracy of trying to access benefits,” Alice emphasized. I’ve gone over a hundred thousand dollars out of pocket.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice said AHI survivors need specialized care that is not covered by insurance. In many cases, effective treatments are experimental. | |||||||||||||||
“The reality is a normal physician cannot help us. This is different. AHIs are much more complicated and we’re basically ticking time bombs. Catherine, I have already started having to go to funerals. Friends of mine, I mean my friend that was with me the day I got my dog has already passed away..a fellow AHI survivor, of a rare form of cancer. I have friends in nursing homes. I have friends with dementia and Parkinson’s. In some ways, people have a heart attack and if you don’t die of it, we know how to fix a heart attack. We don’t know how to fix this.” | |||||||||||||||
CIA PULLS ALICE’S SECURITY CLEARANCE CITING “PSYCHOLOGICAL CONDITIONS” | |||||||||||||||
According to heavily redacted government records, reviewed by our investigative team, after Alice retired, the CIA pulled her security clearance citing “psychological conditions” among other alleged issues. | |||||||||||||||
Alice believes the revocation of her clearance was retaliation, adding that women who came forward about AHIs were treated differently by the CIA. | |||||||||||||||
“It’s like we’re in the 1950s. They brought up, Could you be pregnant? Are you upset because you’re not pregnant? Is it hormones? Is it menopause? Is it perimenopause? Do you have an anxiety disorder? | |||||||||||||||
Alice said the men who reported AHIs were not treated well either, but added, “there hasn’t been a systemic action against them.” | |||||||||||||||
DOD LETTER “WE BELIEVE YOUR EXPERIENCES ARE REAL” | |||||||||||||||
What’s striking is the lack of a coherent response across the US government. Alice and others who say they experienced AHIs get the greatest support and medical help from the Pentagon. | |||||||||||||||
This March letter, obtained by our investigative team, was sent by the then head of the DoD AHI Cross-Functional team, Brigadier General Shannon O’Harren. The DoD Cross-Functional team addresses AHI medical needs and national security implications. | |||||||||||||||
Brig Gen O’Harren, who now serves on the Joint Staff, wrote at the time, “We believe your experiences are real and we are unwaveringly committed to continue to provide quality care for you and those who are eligible.” | |||||||||||||||
The March letter was sent to the AHI cohort after two reports found no medical explanation for their symptoms. | |||||||||||||||
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Alice told us the DoD letter was significant affirmation. “The Department of Defense believes us and has actually gone to bat for those of us from across the US government. I would not be getting care if it wasn’t for senior DOD leadership.” | |||||||||||||||
It is hard to explain the apparent disconnect between the DoD letter and the Intelligence Community’s position that AHI symptoms were probably the result of “pre-existing conditions, conventional illnesses, and environmental factors.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice argued the two are not hard to reconcile. “The brave people of the Department of Defense that have worked on this issue and were willing to stand up to the CIA.” | |||||||||||||||
Asked why she is speaking up after years of quiet advocacy, Alice was blunt. “Because the CIA is betraying and not just betraying but making friends of mine and my life a living hell. I want them to stop hurting my friends. I want them to give everyone I care about medical care and Havana Act payments and to take care of us in the long term. I want them to stop denying what is happening to us and so there can be opportunities to collect the information that we need so that we can prevent this from happening to more people.” | |||||||||||||||
Asked if a Trump/Vance administration can make a change, Alice was hopeful. “I’m not sure the phrase ‘cleaning up the swamp ‘is thrown around a lot in DC but at the bare minimum, I do not believe that those people that were involved in the earlier reports should be allowed to touch this. I think they need to actually recuse themselves or should be replaced.” | |||||||||||||||
Alice predicted the CIA would respond to the allegations by saying “we take every reported case seriously and we’re committed to taking care of our people.” Alice said, “that’s what hurts so much because they’re not.” | |||||||||||||||
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FULL RESPONSES | |||||||||||||||
In response to nearly a dozen questions, which included Alice’s claims of retaliation and sexist treatment of female officers, a CIA spokesperson provided the following statements. | |||||||||||||||
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Because the CIA statements did not address our reporting that in 2021, CIA Director Burns said privately, it was his personal belief Russia was behind some AHIs, we followed up. | |||||||||||||||
The CIA media office provided additional on the record comment. | |||||||||||||||
“As the Director has said, he had his own assumptions when he became Director – so much so that he even warned his Russian counterparts in late 2021. But, as he has said, our analysts’ job is not to validate his assumptions, but to ensure an intensive and professional effort to get as close to ground truth as we can. And that is what we have done and continue to do.”the spokesperson provided a second statement. | |||||||||||||||
The CIA spokesperson said of the bipartisan senate intelligence committee report that found CIA personnel faced delayed and insufficient care: | |||||||||||||||
“We have no greater responsibility than to care for the health and safety of our people. Our dedication to fulfilling this obligation has been, and will continue to be, steadfast. | |||||||||||||||
During the critical periods covered by this report, CIA had to design a response to a vexing problem as both our understanding of the problem and the problem itself evolved – including in the midst of the unprecedented global health pandemic that profoundly disrupted individuals’ access to standard healthcare, medical evaluations, and treatment. At the same time, CIA worked with the IC to conduct a deep and rigorous investigation into the possibility that foreign actors were harming US Government personnel and their families, while also working tirelessly to assist officers and their families in getting the care and support they needed and rightly deserved. | |||||||||||||||
In that environment, supporting our officers and their families required us to dynamically adapt our programs and processes to changing needs and circumstances. Whether, in hindsight, we could have done better is for others to evaluate, but our commitment to ensuring that our officers and their families had access to the care they needed has never wavered. | |||||||||||||||
In addition, while there was no consistent set of symptoms for those reporting possible AHIs, we nonetheless significantly shortened the timeline for individuals to access appropriate care and resources. CIA continues to provide support and access to facilitated treatment and resources. | |||||||||||||||
CIA continues to approach every reported possible AHI with the utmost seriousness and compassion.” | |||||||||||||||
Asked if the National Security Agency has intelligence in its holdings that cast doubt on the 2023 ICA findings that it was unlikely a foreign adversary was behind some attacks, a spokesperson said “we have nothing to give you on this topic, but would refer you to ODNI Media Relations.” | |||||||||||||||
A spokesperson for the nation’s top intelligence official, the Director of National Intelligence or ODNI, strongly disagreed with the House GOP committee interim report among other issues. | |||||||||||||||
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A DoD spokesperson for the Joint Staff said BG O’Harren did not dispute the authenticity of the March 2024 letter, obtained by our team, and he stands behind its contents. | |||||||||||||||
While this content is free, consider becoming a monthly subscriber to support our independent journalism and access future subscriber content. |
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Thank you for the consideration and, most of all, for supporting our journalism! |
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Best, Catherine |
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espionage
In 2025 Critical Political Choices Will Define Canada’s Future: Clement
Justin Trudeau had a Liberal Party fundraiser in Vancouver with a number of Chinese Nationals that included individuals in United Front groups with official ties to Beijing, along with former Liberal multiculturalism minister and prominent party fundraiser Raymond Chan. Numerous donations into Trudeau’s personal Montreal election riding flowed after this Vancouver dinner.
Many Canadian politicians have forged unhealthy relationships with China; Ottawa must renew its most important partnership with the United States, former senior Mountie Garry Clement writes.
As Canada looks ahead to 2025, it stands at a crucial juncture, facing both unprecedented challenges and emerging opportunities. The nation’s evolving relationship with China, ongoing concerns about money laundering, the upcoming federal election, and its delicate position in U.S.-Canada relations present an intricate web of issues that will shape the country’s future. How Canada navigates these issues in the next year will determine not only its global standing but also its domestic harmony.
The China Challenge
Since the era of Pierre Elliott Trudeau, many Canadian politicians have forged what we now recognize as unhealthy relationships with China, enabling the country to interfere in our electoral process at all levels of government. This has provided an opportunity for Triads and Chinese Communist Party sympathizers to infiltrate Canadian society and Canadian politics.
In the past decade, Canada’s relationship with China has been strained, primarily due to geopolitical tensions and human rights concerns, but this has not resulted in any meaningful restrictions being placed on China by Canada. In 2025, this relationship will remain a balancing act—Canada must tread carefully between maintaining diplomatic and trade ties with a rising global power while aligning with Western allies who increasingly view China as a strategic adversary. Canadian politicians will also need to understand and accept that United Front Groups existing in Chinese diaspora communities across Canada have been shown to be allied with the Chinese government.
Canada’s foreign policy decisions will likely be influenced by developments in China’s global ambitions, particularly in areas such as the Belt and Road Initiative, the Taiwan issue, and its growing military presence in the South China Sea. The country’s relationship with China is at a crossroads, with growing calls for Canada to take a firmer stance on human rights issues, such as the treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang and Hong Kong’s autonomy. On the other hand, China remains a vital trading partner, especially in the context of Canada’s resource exports. Notwithstanding this, Canada will have a decision to make and hopefully it leans towards protecting Canada’s sovereignty.
Canada must also be prepared to reassess its foreign policy posture as the global balance of power continues to shift. The 2025 federal election could provide a pivotal moment in shaping public opinion on China and its place in Canada’s future.
We break international stories and this requires elite expertise, time and legal costs.
Money Laundering: An Ongoing Domestic and International Concern
Another pressing issue for Canada in 2025 is the continuing challenge of money laundering, particularly within its real estate and financial sectors. Internationally, Canada’s role in global financial markets means that it cannot afford to be complacent about illicit financial flows. Recent reports have highlighted how foreign actors, including from China, have used Canadian institutions to launder money and hide illicit funds.
The Cullen Commission highlighted that Canada has failed on so many fronts to ensure an effective and efficient legislative, enforcement, and prosecutorial regime existed for almost two decades, thereby making Canada an attractive venue for transnational organized crime groups. This has resulted in Canada having to prove that as a country we can combat money laundering if we want to shore up our failing international credibility. Failure to address these concerns will damage Canada’s reputation as a stable and transparent financial hub, while also complicating its relationships with other Western countries, including the United States. The government must intensify efforts to strengthen regulatory frameworks and enhance cross-border cooperation in financial crime prevention.
The Federal Election: A Fork in the Road
As 2025 approaches, Canada’s political landscape is increasingly polarized. The upcoming federal election promises to be a defining moment for the nation, as Canadians grapple with issues such as climate change, economic recovery post-COVID, affordability, and national unity. Without a doubt, I would argue the silent majority has been awakened and recognizes the past eight years of adopting a strong left-leaning stance has destroyed our reputation, thereby making us an easy target for President-elect Trump’s jibes and eventual pressure policies. The federal government will need to address voter concerns over Canada’s long-term economic health, our failed federal enforcement activity, and our weakened military.
At the same time, the political environment is also becoming more contentious, with rising populism and discontent in some regions. The election could see significant shifts in power, with both the Liberal and Conservative parties positioning themselves to address key issues such as national security, healthcare, and environmental sustainability. The outcome of this election will set the tone for how Canada navigates both domestic and international relations in the years to come.
U.S.-Canada Relations: A Symbiotic but Complex Partnership
Canada’s relationship with the United States remains the cornerstone of its foreign policy. As the world’s largest trading partner, the U.S. is integral to Canada’s economy. However, relations between the two countries are often fraught with tensions, from trade disputes to environmental policies. In 2025, this partnership will be tested further, particularly as both nations contend with the challenges of climate change, security concerns, and evolving trade agreements.
The U.S. presidential election in 2024 has already caused profound impacts on Canada’s policy decisions and political culture. While Canada and the U.S. share many common interests, the complexities of these issues—ranging from pipeline disputes to defense policy—will require sophisticated diplomacy to ensure the continued strength of this vital partnership.
Canada will also need to navigate the increasing pressure from the U.S. to align with its foreign policy stance, particularly in relation to China, Russia, and international trade agreements. While maintaining sovereignty is critical, Canada must ensure its policies do not continue to erode relations with its largest neighbor and closest ally.
A Year of Critical Decisions
Canada in 2025 faces a year of unprecedented decisions, with geopolitical tensions, financial integrity, and political stability all in play. The global stage is shifting, and Canada’s role within this changing landscape will depend on how effectively it addresses both internal challenges and external pressures. As the nation prepares for an important election and responds to global geopolitical shifts, it will need strong, visionary leadership to steer it through uncertain waters. Whether it is rethinking its relationship with China, confronting the realities of money laundering, or strengthening ties with the U.S., Canada’s future will depend on its ability to navigate this complex and interconnected world.
Ultimately, 2025 presents Canada with an opportunity to reassert its values, chart a clear course in the face of global uncertainty, and ensure that it remains a respected and influential player on the world stage.
Garry Clement consults with corporations on anti-money laundering, contributed to the Canadian academic text Dirty Money, and wrote Undercover, In the Shady World of Organized Crime and the RCMP
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