Explore every episode of the podcast The Bureau Podcast
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who is the Minister that promised PRC he would attack other Canadian politicians? NSICOP findings, and why Ottawa needs an Anti-Corruption Commission that doesn't report to Prime Minister | 22 Aug 2024 | 00:51:52 | |
In this podcast interview with Jason James of BNN, I broke down my reporting on alleged PRC colluders in NSICOP 2019. We also discussed why Canada needs an independent anti-corruption agency. And I considered whether Foreign Minister Melanie Joly’s visit to Beijing was representative of Canadian voters, or more likely to benefit influential industrialists in Quebec that have backed Liberal prime ministers from Pierre and Justin Trudeau to Jean Chretien. Enjoy. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Lists of compromised travel documents provided from an allied intelligence agency went missing: CBSA whistleblower allegations | 15 Aug 2024 | 01:17:24 | |
In a lengthy interview with The Bureau Podcast former CBSA officer Luc Sabourin provides explicit details of cases that he believes indicate transnational organized crime has penetrated the systems meant to protect Canada’s borders and corrupted some government workers. The Bureau first reported on some of Sabourin’s explosive allegations yesterday. AfterThe Bureau’s deadline for this story, in which Sabourin alleged Canada’s border protection agency had destroyed hundreds of foreign passports that included the identities of some suspects sought by CBSA, the agency provided a statement. The statement did not answer this written question fromThe Bureau: “Does CBSA acknowledge that there are concerns that serious transnational organized crime has accessed CBSA systems and staff, and that the concern of fraudulent use of passport[s] and other travel documents by dangerous actors could be undermined by some CBSA staff due to corruption concerns?” The CBSA’s statement says “allegations made by Mr. Sabourin with regards [to] the destruction of passports have been thoroughly investigated by impartial persons who have all concluded that no inappropriate destruction occurred.” The statement continues, saying “it is legal and necessary to destroy identity documents and there are procedures to guide this. There is no evidence that these procedures were not followed.” And “while the CBSA is aware of Mr. Sabourin concerns regarding the destruction of passports, the Agency has not received any complaints regarding threats made against him by organized crime.” Spokeswoman Karine Martel also stated: “In this case I can tell you that the CBSA undertook two separate workplace investigations following allegations of harassment as well as cooperated with officials from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as part of their fact-finding work related to allegations of passport destruction.” The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Why did CSIS's Director recall intel on a "politically-connected Canadian"? | 25 Apr 2024 | 01:00:17 | |
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| The Bureau Podcast: How high does the Winnipeg-Wuhan Lab story go in Canada, and does it connect to PRC Election Interference? | 27 Mar 2024 | 01:06:20 | |
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| Iranian regime critic alleges "unprecedented foreign interference" in Conservative's Toronto nomination | 24 Feb 2024 | 00:26:03 | |
The Bureau is a reader-supported publication covering threats to democracy globally. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| The Bureau Podcast 5: MP Chong goes to Washington; Taiwan offers Canada help against Beijing's United Front; is Ottawa's public inquiry set up for truth? | 13 Sep 2023 | 00:36:47 | |
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| The Bureau Podcast 4: Beijing allegedly tried to unseat Canadian mayor | 29 Aug 2023 | 00:39:59 | |
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| The Bureau Podcast 3: PRC-controlled media in Canada; the Canada Model of organized crime real estate development | 09 Aug 2023 | 00:43:44 | |
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| The Bureau Podcast 2: The complexities of William Majcher and Beijing's Fox Hunt | 02 Aug 2023 | 00:32:28 | |
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| "I've faced 5 bomb threats; my wife has been stalked": Canadian MP suspects PRC threats and reputation attack | 07 Aug 2024 | 01:03:37 | |
In an interview withThe Bureau Podcast independent MP Kevin Vuong explained why he suspects that his Liberal candidacy in a Toronto riding was sabotaged by foreign actors during the 2021 election with the curiously timed reporting of a withdrawn sexual assault complaint. Vuong says he has shared his suspicions with CSIS, and also believes “CCP-aligned” members of the Liberal Party tried to undermine his candidacy. Adding a bombshell at the end of our 60-minute conversation, Vuong said RCMP should take another look at circumstances surrounding the sudden death of former Ontario Liberal minister David Caplan, who was reportedly seeking a federal Liberal nomination in Toronto before his July 2019 death. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Like Russian Dolls with PRC intel at the core: Untangling front companies common to CCP influence against Trudeau Foundation, Hunter Biden and United Nations leaders | 19 Jul 2024 | 00:43:17 | |
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| Australian media commentator smeared with false allegations by Chinese intelligence | 17 Jul 2024 | 00:39:09 | |
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| Exposing Iranian Guard infiltration of Canada and the Islamic Republic's war on Israel | 12 Jul 2024 | 00:37:18 | |
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| Should the Prime Minister be classified a "witting" beneficiary of PRC support? | 26 Jun 2024 | 00:41:15 | |
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| Why CSIS believes Beijing is collecting Kompromat on both Houses of Parliament | 05 Jun 2024 | 01:17:47 | |
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| Why The Pentagon was briefed Canada is a "forward operational hub" for PRC threat networks | 15 May 2024 | 00:59:08 | |
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| Addiction worker estimates 90 percent of "safer supply" drugs resold on black market | 29 Apr 2024 | 00:09:15 | |
It is difficult to pin down exactly how much of British Columbia government’s pharmaceutical “safer supply” is getting laundered into organized crime cash pools used to purchase fentanyl or trafficked directly into Canada’s population, including youthful drug abusers that can get their hands on government hydromorphone — known on the street as “Dillies” or “Smack” according to the D.E.A. — for a few bucks per tablet. Two things are clear though. Very significant amounts of taxpayer-funded Dillies are diverted into the holdings of drug gangs. And it isn’t politically feasible for B.C. police officers aware of these trends, to say so. [Editor’s note: The video interview accompanying this Op/Ed was posted first to Break the Needle, a platform partnering with The Bureau on fentanyl crisis stories.] On March 7, an RCMP detachment in the northern city of Prince George put out a press release saying: “We have noted an alarming trend over the last year in the amount of prescription drugs located during drug trafficking investigations, noting they are being used as a form of currency to purchase more potent, illicit street drugs. Organized crime groups are actively involved in the redistribution of safe supply and prescription drugs, some of which are then moved out of British Columbia and resold. The reselling of prescription drugs significantly increases the profits realized by Organized Crime.” The news led to a public spat between neighbouring Alberta and B.C. governments, and it took only a few days for RCMP to backpedal. On March 11, a senior executive with B.C. RCMP, an arm of the federal force contracted to provide local services by B.C.’s government, issued a clarifying press release saying: “The presence of confirmed safer supply prescriptions are in the minority of drug seizures. While there have been recent investigations that have resulted in notable quantities being seized, there is currently no evidence to support a widespread diversion of safer supply drugs in the illicit market in B.C. or Canada.” This was interesting to me. Maybe concerning is the better word. I know from my investigations into B.C. government casino money laundering scandals, that some former RCMP officers strongly believed the national force was certainly not encouraged in the early 2000s by B.C.’s Liberal government to look into organized crime’s deep infiltration of government gambling facilities. Some of my sources for the book Wilful Blindness, including a former RCMP officer named Fred Pinnock, believed RCMP’s provincial policing contract perhaps got in the way of probing organized crime infiltration into B.C.’s economy. The allegation was denied and has never been proven. But there are former officers that nevertheless maintain political interference is a problem for the RCMP in B.C., and elsewhere in Canada. Back to B.C. government’s safer supply programs. A few weeks ago, more testimony, this time from a senior police officer in Vancouver, that seemed to directly contradict the B.C. RCMP’s March 11th narrative adjustment. Fiona Wilson, deputy chief of the Vancouver Police Department and president of the B.C. Association of Chiefs of Police, told parliamentarians about 50 percent of the hydromorphone recently seized in B.C. comes from safer supply. Independent journalist Adam Zivo, who has been at the forefront of examining the unintended consequences of Canada’s safer supply policies, reported that B.C. Premier David Eby claimed he was shocked by the data Wilson cited. Zivo, despite furious pushback from some political, medical and academic circles that are deeply invested in safer supply — the theory that distributing “non-toxic” opioids will help rather than hurt in Canada’s fentanyl overdose crisis — has developed his reporting the hard way, traveling across Canada and talking to the workers and experts and former drug users and youth that are actually involved in the crisis. And Zivo is being proven right as evidence from police investigations starts to surface. His latest work, an in-depth interview with David McEvoy, an Ottawa-based addiction outreach worker, suggests that about 90 percent of McEvoy’s clients are reselling their taxpayer-funded drugs on the street, leading to new addictions and relapses. Zivo reports that McEvoy’s testimony is consistent with the testimony of dozens of addiction experts, former drug users, and youth. A summary of his interview in the National Post can be read here. If McEvoy’s experience is replicated widely among similar frontline addiction workers across Canada, or even a substantial number in the field, The Bureau takes the position that a federal inquiry into the safer supply programs is in order. sam@thebureau.news This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| All The Prime Minister’s Women: Who Are The Key Staffers Involved On PRC Intel Handling | 10 Oct 2024 | 00:43:22 | |
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| Investigative Reports: How Chinese Gangs Quietly Built a Multi-Billion Dollar Cannabis Empire Under Maine’s Watch | 01 Oct 2024 | 01:00:20 | |
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| TRUDEAU TESTIMONY: BOMBSHELLS, SMOKE, MIRRORS | 23 Oct 2024 | 01:00:30 | |
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| 'The Informal Network in This Bank Were like A Secret Police' | 05 Nov 2024 | 01:07:37 | |
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| CIA Leak Prompts Call for Trump Administration Review of Iran, China, and Russia Intel Penetration: Former Deputy Mid-East Defense Secretary | 15 Nov 2024 | 00:33:56 | |
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| Geopolitics and Aggression on US and Canadian Soil | 14 Nov 2024 | 00:33:52 | |
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| The Ye-Xi Clique: Probing the Kingmaker Clan and CCP-Triad Network Behind Xi's Rise in Fujian | 27 Nov 2024 | 01:01:40 | |
This is the first in a series of podcast discussions with Christopher Meyer, a former U.S. official and China expert. Meyer now investigates the same Communist Party influence networks covered by The Bureau and explored in my first book, Wilful Blindness. Currently, Meyer serves as the head of the U.S. Micronesia Council and is the founder of WideFountain, a platform for in-depth geopolitical analysis. A passionate China observer since age 16, Meyer studied East Asian Studies at George Washington University, where he wrote a thesis on the geopolitical dimensions of China’s Special Economic Zones. His career includes: * Five years in sales and marketing with a U.S. Fortune 500 company. * Service in the U.S. diplomatic corps as an Asia expert at the Development Finance Corporation (DFC). * Consulting on U.S. government projects, particularly in Micronesia. * Founding an edtech company, patenting innovative products, and building supply chains in Taiwan and China. In 2018, Meyer began focused research into Chinese strategic corruption and political warfare, deepening his expertise in CCP influence operations. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| With a HK$1 Million Bounty on Her Head, Frances Hui Faced Surveillance and Death Threats on US Soil—Today, She Tells MPs Why Ottawa Must Combat CCP Repression | 26 Nov 2024 | 00:42:57 | |
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| Are Secret Foreign Aerospace Platforms or Non-Human UAP Incursions Troubling New Jersey? Why National Security Experts Aren’t Ruling It Out | 19 Dec 2024 | 01:14:46 | |
In this episode, we dive deep into theoretical possibilities with Matthew Pines, a U.S. national security expert who arguably has the best grasp—among non-security-cleared Americans—of what might be happening over sensitive U.S. government sites and in New Jersey. His insights on topics that may seem fringe but are taken seriously in little-known corners of the U.S. government—specifically on UAPs and cryptocurrency—have led me to reconsider areas I had previously dismissed as implausible. Matthew’s expertise on global financial systems and the hybrid war over currency domination and financial flow visibility also provides surprising insights into the growing conflict between democratic and authoritarian states. This leads into an area I know well: how Beijing is attempting to leverage trillions in Chinese capital flight strategically. This sheds light on many troubling issues currently plaguing North America, including Chinese police stations, fentanyl-related deaths, real estate money laundering, and housing affordability. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| The Xi Jinping Oil Front Operation That Targeted the “Big Guy” and Hunter Biden | 18 Dec 2024 | 01:09:50 | |
In this episode with former U.S. official Christopher Meyer, we delve into the succession of transnational gangster Lai Changxing’s global oil smuggling operation and its transition into the hands of a new proxy acting on behalf of Chinese intelligence—one who ultimately corrupted the Biden family. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. Currently, Meyer serves as the head of the U.S. Micronesia Council and is the founder of WideFountain, a platform for in-depth geopolitical analysis. A passionate China observer since age 16, Meyer studied East Asian Studies at George Washington University, where he wrote a thesis on the geopolitical dimensions of China’s Special Economic Zones. His career includes: * Five years in sales and marketing with a U.S. Fortune 500 company. * Service in the U.S. diplomatic corps as an Asia expert at the Development Finance Corporation (DFC). * Consulting on U.S. government projects, particularly in Micronesia. * Founding an edtech company, patenting innovative products, and building supply chains in Taiwan and China. In 2018, Meyer began focused research into Chinese strategic corruption and political warfare, deepening his expertise in CCP influence operations. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Luc Sabourin: I Raised Alarms Up To Public Safety Minister's Office And Faced Obstruction At Every Level | 13 Dec 2024 | 00:37:38 | |
The Bureau Podcast interviewed CBSA whistleblower Luc Sabourin today, delving into the exclusive story linked below. Sabourin initially contacted me after reading my report from immigration control officer Brian McAdam—a story that resonates with ongoing U.S. government concerns. In our discussion, we explored shared beliefs held by McAdam and Sabourin, particularly their assertion that transnational crime has deeply infiltrated Canada’s immigration systems. OTTAWA, Canada — Luc Sabourin, a former Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officer, has accused his former employer of systemic failures that he believes have compromised national security, with devastating consequences for relations with the United States. In a sworn statement submitted to several Canadian MPs, Sabourin alleges mismanagement and corruption within CBSA that may have allowed hundreds of terrorists wanted by the United States to exploit Canada’s border systems. His claims come at a critical moment, as the Canadian government faces mounting pressure from the incoming Trump administration to address border security weaknesses and avert crippling tariffs. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Weaponizing Drugs and Dirty Money: Lai Changxing's Vancouver Beachhead | 11 Dec 2024 | 00:58:23 | |
This is the second in a series of podcast discussions with Christopher Meyer, a former U.S. official and China expert. Meyer now investigates the same Communist Party influence networks covered by The Bureau and explored in my first book, Wilful Blindness. Currently, Meyer serves as the head of the U.S. Micronesia Council and is the founder of WideFountain, a platform for in-depth geopolitical analysis. A passionate China observer since age 16, Meyer studied East Asian Studies at George Washington University, where he wrote a thesis on the geopolitical dimensions of China’s Special Economic Zones. His career includes: * Five years in sales and marketing with a U.S. Fortune 500 company. * Service in the U.S. diplomatic corps as an Asia expert at the Development Finance Corporation (DFC). * Consulting on U.S. government projects, particularly in Micronesia. * Founding an edtech company, patenting innovative products, and building supply chains in Taiwan and China. In 2018, Meyer began focused research into Chinese strategic corruption and political warfare, deepening his expertise in CCP influence operations. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| 41 Candidates Backed by PRC in 2019: What Did Trudeau Know? (Plus, Predicting Trump’s Stance Before the Fentanyl Tariff Bombshell) | 05 Dec 2024 | 00:49:02 | |
On November 20, a week before Donald Trump announced his threat of 25 percent sanctions against Canada over vulnerabilities in fentanyl trafficking, illegal immigration, and border controls, I spoke with Jason James of BNN about what Ottawa could expect from the new administration in Washington. “The mandate they have regarding national security, borders, and their distrust of Canada will be inherited from the Biden administration. It won’t be different—it will just be a lot more serious,” I said. “Trudeau has already shot himself in the foot.” We also discussed my investigations into Beijing’s United Front election interference plans, as revealed in a Chinese Communist Party document on the 2019 Canadian federal election, and touched on Iran’s assassination networks in North America. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| PRC Interference in Canada: From Pierre Trudeau and Jean Chrétien to Justin Trudeau and the Influence Networks Behind the Scenes | 25 Dec 2024 | 01:58:10 | |
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| Canada in Crisis: Cooper and Marc Cohodes Unpack a Decade of Research—Christy Clark, BC Belt and Road, Trump’s Threats, and CCP's Grip on Canada’s Elite | 13 Jan 2025 | 01:10:10 | |
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| Xi's Machiavellian Rise and Mounting Challenges to Beijing's Rule Of One | 24 Jan 2025 | 00:41:16 | |
In this episode with former U.S. official Christopher Meyer, we discuss the takedown of General Secretary Xi’s main rival, Bo Xilai, and growing resistance to Xi’s leadership in Beijing. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Currently, Meyer serves as the head of the U.S. Micronesia Council and is the founder of WideFountain, a platform for in-depth geopolitical analysis. A passionate China observer since age 16, Meyer studied East Asian Studies at George Washington University, where he wrote a thesis on the geopolitical dimensions of China’s Special Economic Zones. His career includes: * Five years in sales and marketing with a U.S. Fortune 500 company. * Service in the U.S. diplomatic corps as an Asia expert at the Development Finance Corporation (DFC). * Consulting on U.S. government projects, particularly in Micronesia. * Founding an edtech company, patenting innovative products, and building supply chains in Taiwan and China. In 2018, Meyer began focused research into Chinese strategic corruption and political warfare, deepening his expertise in CCP influence operations. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Mark Carney, Beijing's United Front, and the Battle for Richmond | 12 Feb 2025 | 00:37:26 | |
In this interview, Jason James of BNN Podcast asked me for a detailed breakdown of the Hogue Commission’s impact on the Asian diaspora—communities seeking protection after years of neglect from Canada’s federal government and courts. Sadly, I found that Hogue’s conclusions are already being weaponized against Conservative nomination candidate Kenny Chiu in Richmond, a key Vancouver-area riding targeted by Beijing’s Ministry of State Security. I explained that in 2021, Chiu’s Liberal opponent, Parm Bains, benefited from United Front Work Department support. Now, Liberal leadership frontrunner Mark Carney has appeared alongside Bains in Richmond—where a known United Front leader was seen apparently mobilizing support for Carney and Bains ahead of the next Canadian election. Meanwhile, Chiu’s opponent for the Conservative nomination is using Justice Hogue’s final report to accuse him of racism. My word for this: Egregious. [Clarification: B.C.’s Commission into Money Laundering actually had 101 Recommendations, which I argue, should be implemented to respond to the Trump Administration’s fentanyl concerns in Canada.] The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Exclusive: Secretary of State Warned B.C. Mayor U.S. Agencies Are Withholding Evidence Due to Canada’s Legal Loopholes and Lack of Fentanyl Prosecutions | 13 Feb 2025 | 00:50:31 | |
In this explosive interview, B.C. Mayor Brad West reveals sensitive details from his 2023 meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, including Blinken’s unsettling claim that American agencies are holding back intelligence from Canada. “They’ve lost confidence,” West says, adding that U.S. officials are stunned by how much access major figures in Asian organized crime have to Canada’s political class. Listen to the interview, and stay tuned to The Bureau for continuing coverage of this developing story. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Five Eyes Fallout: Why the U.S. Sees Canada as the Weak Link | 27 Feb 2025 | 00:34:59 | |
I wasn't surprised by the Financial Times report indicating that Peter Navarro, a senior Trump administration official known for his ultra-hawkish stance on China, was circulating plans to limit U.S. national security exposure to Canada. The U.S. perceives Canada as the weakest link in the Five Eyes intelligence alliance due to its vulnerabilities to Chinese infiltration. Two weeks ago, a military source shared a report with me confirming that similar discussions were taking place within the U.S. national security and military community, pointing directly to Navarro. And according to my military source, expelling Canada from Five Eyes is just one of several actions under discussion. As I’ve discussed before, this aligns with broader U.S. concerns—for example, the People's Liberation Army's breach of Canada’s Level 4 Lab in Winnipeg and the inexplicable return of the main suspects Dr. Qiu and Keding Cheng to China after allegedly transferring sensitive bioweapon research to Wuhan. The fact that Canada also partnered with CanSino, a PLA-linked company, on a COVID-19 vaccine only deepens those concerns. CanSino was part of the Winnipeg Lab breach plot according to CSIS. This isn’t speculation—it’s open-source fact. As I reported a year ago: The CSIS report adds Qiu was "dismissive" when asked if she thought her collaborations with WIV and other Chinese institutions involved in the Thousand Talents program including CanSino Biologics "have assisted the capabilities of the PLA." Now, think about what the U.S. government knows that we don’t? In this discussion with Jason James of BNN—recorded before FT broke this Five Eyes exclusion story—I answered his question about what the Trump administration really means when it warns of Canada’s fentanyl vulnerabilities. As Trump escalates economic pressure and even suggests Canada should become the 51st state, his trade adviser Navarro is dismissing the report on Canada’s removal from Five Eyes as ‘crazy stuff.’ But make no mistake. Before the Financial Times report, I already had sources pointing to these exact concerns—now they’re out in the open. Canada needs to take these concerns seriously and act accordingly. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Allies or Adversaries? Decoding Trump’s Disruption in Canada, Ukraine and Europe | 11 Mar 2025 | 00:50:27 | |
Thanks for coming to The Bureau, where we provide some of the most sophisticated geopolitical analysis in the world—especially in these turbulent times. That’s the theme today: many Canadians are shocked and concerned by reports that the Trump administration may be considering cutting Canada out of the Five Eyes alliance, imposing border adjustments, and even referring to Canada as the '51st state.' So, what is really going on here? Chris Meyer, a former U.S. official who, like me, has spent the past decade studying China’s global influence operations, has some interesting advice for Canadians and our elected MPs (and Liberal-leader elect Mark Carney.) In our conversation, the concept of cognitive dissonance emerges—two competing ideas, each containing some truth, yet their contradictions breed confusion and chaos. On one side is Trump’s sledgehammer rhetoric, coupled with his tactical, transactional approach to ‘deal-making’—a style that risks inflicting lasting damage on one of the most vital modern democratic alliances: the Canada-U.S. relationship. Beyond that, it threatens to undermine the post-World War II Anglo intelligence alliance. On the other, there’s the stark reality that Canada has deep border and port vulnerabilities to China and organized crime—issues that have long raised concerns within U.S. administrations, past and present, as I know from my reporting. And that concern is only growing as the risk of a larger war involving China, Taiwan, Russia, and Europe intensifies. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Currently, Meyer serves as the head of the U.S. Micronesia Council and is the founder of WideFountain, a platform for in-depth geopolitical analysis. A passionate China observer since age 16, Meyer studied East Asian Studies at George Washington University, where he wrote a thesis on the geopolitical dimensions of China’s Special Economic Zones. His career includes: * Five years in sales and marketing with a U.S. Fortune 500 company. * Service in the U.S. diplomatic corps as an Asia expert at the Development Finance Corporation (DFC). * Consulting on U.S. government projects, particularly in Micronesia. * Founding an edtech company, patenting innovative products, and building supply chains in Taiwan and China. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Collapsed Beijing Belt and Road Station in Serbia Triggers Revolution Against 'Mafia State' Corruption | 08 Apr 2025 | 00:36:03 | |
Welcome back to The Bureau. Today we’re joined by independent journalist Adam Zivo, whose reporting has shed powerful light on one of Canada’s most controversial policies: the “safer supply” opioid program. Meant to save lives, these programs have been exploited by organized crime—making the fentanyl crisis worse, not better. Right now, Adam is reporting from Serbia, where massive student-led protests are challenging a deeply entrenched system many describe as a mafia state. These protests are historic—not just for Serbia, but for the global moment we’re in. Serbia’s government has close ties with China’s Belt and Road Initiative, a sweeping plan by Chinese President Xi Jinping to grow China’s global influence through foreign investment and infrastructure. But American intelligence sees a darker side to the Belt and Road—saying it’s also about setting up military footholds and corruption networks to boost Beijing’s plans to replace Washington as global hegemon. In our conversation, Adam gives us a critical breakdown of what’s happening on the ground, beginning with the dramatic collapse of a train station built under the Belt and Road. It’s a striking symbol of what’s to come as the United States steps back from global leadership, and China fills the gap with its own brand of "foreign aid" that carries dangerous strings attached. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Here’s what we cover: What’s Happening in Serbia * Collapse of a major train station built by a Chinese firm under the Belt and Road Initiative * Student protestors attacked by the government * Protests grow throughout November: * Students reject political leaders — they organize through public forums called plenums * They rotate spokespersons and emphasize peaceful resistance — even cleaning up after protests * Their movement is not tied to any political party * They issue four initial demands: * Release government spending documents * Investigate and charge those who attacked protestors * Drop charges against protestors * Increase the education budget by 20% * Their non-political, disciplined approach draws wide support * By December: * 100,000 protestors join across the country * 50 university faculties shut down * President Vučić tries to paint the protests as a “colour revolution” (a foreign-backed plot) Into 2025: The Movement Grows * In January, thousands of students begin marching nationwide — joined and protected by biker gangs, who support the protests and are respected in rural areas * By March, more than 300,000 people — nearly 5% of Serbia’s population — are protesting * National railways are shut down by mysterious bomb threats * Protestors face hooligan attacks, firecrackers, and even a sound cannon — which the government denies using * Students add a fifth demand: Investigate the use of sound cannons * Meanwhile, opposition parties are calling for a new interim government made up of neutral technocrats, and fresh elections * This demand is gaining some support among the wider protest movement * President Vučić has rejected the idea Big Questions Ahead * Can the student movement stay independent of party politics? * Will they form a new political force — or ally with the opposition? The Deeper History Behind It All * Serbia has struggled with organized crime and corruption since the 1990s * Under Slobodan Milošević, the country grew more nationalistic and authoritarian, fueling brutal wars in Bosnia and Kosovo * Aleksandar Vučić, Serbia’s current president, was once Minister of Information under Milošević (1998–2000) * He was part of the far-right Serbian Radical Party * During his time, journalists were murdered, foreign media was banned, and independent outlets were heavily punished * After student protests helped bring down Milošević, reformer Zoran Đinđić became Prime Minister in the early 2000s * He was assassinated in 2003 by mafia-linked police and elites * Vučić later rebranded himself as a pro-European moderate * In 2012, his Serbian Progressive Party won elections and formed a minority government — launching his rise to full power This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Breaking Down Carney’s Beijing Investments, CCP Greenwashing, and the Echoes of 1938—Plus a Careful Look at His WEF and AIIB Ties | 19 Mar 2025 | 00:34:32 | |
In this discussion with Jason James, a few weeks before Mark Carney became Canada’s prime minister—securing nearly 90 percent of votes in the opaque Liberal Party contest to replace Justin Trudeau—I explained why I cautiously explored Carney’s role in international multilaterals and investments where Beijing’s influence is evident, such as the World Economic Forum. Our conversation also touches on my assessment of the growing collision course between Washington and Beijing, which may partly explain President Donald Trump’s wrecking-ball approach to international alliances, supply chains, and diplomacy. “This is, tragically, like 1938,” I said. “It seems like that’s where we are. And if you understand that, whatever your interest is in the world—if you have some time for geopolitics—I’m not saying the confusion goes away, but the fog starts to lift.” The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Fentanyl, Fraud, and the Ballot Box: Safer Supply’s Role in Canada’s Overdose Crisis | 24 Apr 2025 | 01:03:59 | |
This week on The Bureau, we examine one of the most urgent and politically charged stories in Canada: the crisis surrounding government-issued “safer supply.” I’m joined by Adam Zivo, the investigative reporter who broke many of the key stories exposing the unintended—and often devastating—consequences of Canada’s drug policy experiment. Together, we unpack how federal and provincial “safer supply” programs, originally designed as harm-reduction tools, have instead become conduits for organized crime. In some regions, like London, Ontario—where fentanyl once had little presence—the program has triggered an influx of potent opioids and fueled new criminal markets. We’ll explore what’s really happening on the ground, why this issue matters in Canada’s federal election on Monday, and which political parties are pledging to reverse course—or maintain the status quo, even as overdose deaths surge and fentanyl floods our streets. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Canadian 2025 Election Interference Deep Dive, And What’s Behind PCO’s Dystopian Warning Report | 27 Apr 2025 | 01:19:34 | |
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| 'It's Surreal To Live Through a Banana Republic, Gaslighting Election': What Comes Next for the Liberal Party’s New Old Guard | 14 May 2025 | 00:58:14 | |
In this podcast discussion with Jason James, I break down Prime Minister Mark Carney’s highly cynical—yet highly successful—election campaign, and explore the implications of three major recent investigations by The Bureau: * A deeper dive into Chinese Communist Party operations targeting Canada’s Parliament, including new details on threats against Conservative candidate Joseph Tay and his family in Hong Kong. (Recall that the Liberal Party previously turned a blind eye to Chinese secret police targeting of MP Michael Chong’s relatives in Hong Kong.) * The United Front’s quiet takeover of Canada’s legal cannabis market, using licensed grow-ops and brokerage houses as fronts for laundering and trafficking. * The DEA’s frustrations after being stonewalled in a 40-kilogram carfentanil seizure case in Toronto—an investigation with suspected links to Chinese and Pakistani transnational threat networks. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Inspired by Ukraine, Armed by the U.S., Reinvented by Tech: Taiwan’s New Way of War | 14 May 2025 | 00:02:33 | |
TAIWAN — The HIMARS roar that echoed off the coastal mountains of southern Taiwan this week was more than a weapons test. It was a declaration of deterrence. From their perch at Jiupeng military base—where steep green ridges descend toward the Pacific—Taiwanese forces fired the U.S.-made rocket artillery system in a live-fire display designed to show how the island is transforming itself into a fortress of modern asymmetric warfare. The Taiwanese unit conducting the test had trained with U.S. forces in Oklahoma in 2024, and this week’s exercise marked the first time they demonstrated their proficiency with HIMARS on home soil. The HIMARS platform—demonstrated in footage provided to The Bureau from Taiwan Plus—signals a decisive shift toward a mobile, nimble defensive force designed to face overwhelming scale. Unlike fixed missile sites or air bases—prime targets expected to be destroyed within hours of a PLA first-wave assault—truck-mounted HIMARS units can slip into position, launch a strike, and quickly vanish into Taiwan’s jungle-thick terrain and cliffside roads. These launchers are meant to hide, hit, and move—relying on camouflage, speed, and the natural topography of the island to stay alive and strike again. This transformation had been quietly underway for years. In September 2023, The Bureau met with Taiwanese military strategists and international journalists at a closed-door roundtable in Taipei. Among them was a Ukrainian defense consultant—invited to share hard-won battlefield lessons from Kyiv’s resistance. The strategist told the group that the most crucial lesson for Taiwan was psychological: to instill in citizens and soldiers alike the will to prepare for aggression that seems impossible and illogical, before it arrives. “You must believe the worst can happen,” the Ukraine vet said. That same week in Taipei, Taiwan’s then-Foreign Minister Joseph Wu made the case directly in an interview:“There's a growing consensus among the key analysts in the United States and also in Taiwan that war is not inevitable and the war is not imminent,” Wu said. “And we have been making significant investment in our own defense—not just increasing our military budget, but also engaging serious military reforms, in the sense of asymmetric strategy and asymmetric capability.” That principle now guides Taiwan’s evolving force posture. The May 12 HIMARS test—launching precision-guided rockets into a Pacific exclusion zone—was the first public demonstration of the mobile artillery system since the U.S. delivered the first batch in late 2024. With a range of 300 kilometers, HIMARS provides not only mobility but standoff power, allowing Taiwan’s forces to strike amphibious staging areas, beachheads, and ships from hardened inland positions. Lockheed Martin engineers observed the drills, which were broadcast across Taiwanese news networks as both a military signal and psychological campaign. The live-fire exercise also marked the debut of the Land Sword II, a domestically developed surface-to-air missile system designed to counter diverse aerial threats, including cruise missiles, aircraft, and drones. Land Sword II adds a mobile, all-weather air defense layer to Taiwan’s increasingly dense multi-domain network. By deploying it alongside HIMARS, Taiwan demonstrated its commitment to building overlapping shields—striking at invading forces while protecting its launch platforms from aerial suppression. But these new missile systems are only the tip of the spear. Taiwan’s military has quietly abandoned the vestiges of a Cold War posture centered on fleet battles and long-range missile parity with the mainland. Defense officials now concede that attempts to match Beijing plane-for-plane or ship-for-ship are a dead end. Instead, inspired by the “porcupine” concept outlined by retired U.S. Marines and intelligence officials, Taiwan is remaking itself into a smart, lethal archipelago fortress—one where unmanned drones, dispersed missile cells, and underground fiber-linked command posts neutralize China’s numerical advantage. Wu, who now serves as Secretary-General of Taiwan’s National Security Council, has been one of the doctrine’s most consistent advocates. In his writings and interviews, Wu points to Ukraine’s ability to hold off a vastly superior invader through mobility, deception, and smart munitions. “We are not seeking parity. We are seeking survivability,” he wrote in Foreign Affairs. “And if we survive, we win.” A New Arsenal of Ideas: From Silicon Valley to the Taiwan Strait If Ukraine showed the value of agile, off-the-shelf technologies on the battlefield, Taiwan seems poised to go a step further—by integrating cutting-edge systems developed not by defense contractors, but by Silicon Valley insurgents. Among the most closely watched innovators is Palmer Luckey, the former Oculus founder whose defense firm, Anduril Industries, is quietly revolutionizing battlefield autonomy. Through its Dive Technologies division and flagship Ghost and Bolt drone platforms, Anduril builds AI-guided aerial and underwater drones capable of swarming enemy ships, submarines, and even mines—exactly the kinds of systems Taiwan could deploy along its maritime approaches and chokepoints. Luckey, who visited Japan and South Korea in early 2025 to brief U.S. allies on asymmetric AI warfare, has warned that in a Taiwan invasion scenario, the side with better autonomous targeting and tracking could determine victory before a single human-fired missile is launched. “The PLA is betting big on AI,” he told Business Insider. “If Taiwan and the U.S. don’t match that, we’re done.” Much of this strategy finds intellectual backing in The Boiling Moat, a 2024 strategy volume edited by former U.S. National Security Advisor Matt Pottinger. The book proposes a multi-layered defense of Taiwan that includes hardened ground troops, swarming drones, portable anti-ship missiles, and AI battlefield networking. Pottinger argues that Taiwan must become “the toughest target on earth”—a phrase now common among Taiwanese officers briefing American delegations. Speaking to NPR last year, Pottinger noted that Taiwan’s survival doesn’t rest on matching China’s power, but on “convincing Beijing that the price of conquest will be far too high to bear.” The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| The Third Son: How China’s Narco-Commanders Took Root in Canada | 17 May 2025 | 00:51:15 | |
In this special episode, investigative Sinologist Chris Meyer of Wide Fountain joins The Bureau to dissect a deeply troubling picture emerging from our reporting—one that places Canada at the center of a global narcotics and money laundering operation with ties to Chinese intelligence. At the heart of the conversation: Chi Lap Tse, also known as Sam Gor, or “The Third Son”—the elusive boss of a transnational criminal organization trafficking fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, ketamine, methamphetamine and cannabis globally into the Americas, using Canada as a production, transshipment and money laundering hub for China. Based on assessments of The Bureau’s multiple investigations, including DEA and RCMP intelligence, and his research into Chinese history, Meyer argues that Tse and his “Big Circle Boys” associates are not just drug traffickers—but state-trained commanders whose operations benefit, and in some cases are subtly directed by, the Chinese Communist Party. We revisit my recent exposé on a mysterious 30-acre estate in B.C.’s Columbia Valley—just steps from the U.S. border—tied to Tse, a senior Chinese security figure, United Front-linked mining and chemical interests, and convicted Sam Gor narcotics traffickers like Ye Long Yong. According to RCMP sources, the property has been flagged for cross-border helicopter smuggling, association to high-level money laundering, cannabis, and a nexus of geopolitical friction between Ottawa and Washington. Meyer connects the dots between Canada’s exploitation by United Front mafias and those that architected their global operations in southern China, where Xi Jinping’s backers wield tremendous regional influence that has captured the balance of power in Beijing, according to Wide Fountain’s reports. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| United Front Narcos: From Maine Farms to New York Command and Vancouver Safe-houses—Inside the CCP’s North American Drug Web | 22 May 2025 | 00:43:25 | |
Welcome back to The Bureau. Today, we bring you a special cross-border collaboration—linking explosive findings from rural Maine to revelations inside Vancouver’s shadow economy. Joining me is Steve Robinson, the investigative editor who got the ball rolling on a major story tying an illegal marijuana operation in Maine to the Chinese Communist Party’s United Front Work Department—Beijing’s foreign influence and intelligence arm. Steve’s reporting for The Maine Wire—later advanced by the Daily Caller News Foundation—traces how a so-called community group in New York City, the Sijiu Association, maintains close ties to the Chinese Consulate and has pledged financial support to United Front projects. These findings echo what The Bureau has uncovered in Canada, where United Front operatives have used legalization as cover for a sprawling cannabis export and laundering network. In Vancouver, Toronto, and remote parts of British Columbia and Ontario especially, United Front-linked triads have quietly consolidated legal cannabis licenses, exploited illegal migrant labor, and shipped massive volumes of marijuana to the United States and Japan, with inroads to Europe too—laundering the proceeds back through Canadian banks. In this episode, Steve and I will compare notes, connect the dots, and expose how these networks—rooted in state-directed influence and organized crime—are reshaping the underground economy across North America, just as FBI scrutiny intensifies. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| The Reverse Opium War and Xi’s Silent Crisis | 02 Jun 2025 | 00:59:53 | |
Sam welcomes back Chris Meyer from Wide Fountain to break down The Bureau’s explosive reporting with retired DEA agent Don Im—and the chilling implications of what Im and other U.S. experts describe as a “reverse Opium War.” They trace the roots of Beijing’s alleged silent role in a vast narcotics-finance system: a web of Triads, Communist Party actors, and Western enablers laundering drug proceeds through legitimate trade. From fentanyl warehouses in Vancouver to encrypted cash auctions on WeChat, this is a global operation—sophisticated, deliberate, and devastating. Chris and Sam explore how Donald Trump’s trade war exposed fractures in a covert global economy—and why emerging signals from within China suggest Xi Jinping’s grip on power may be weakening. As the West confronts the mounting toll of fentanyl, Chris calls for a bipartisan reckoning: no more trade without accountability—and reparations. This isn’t just a narco story. It’s a story of power, profit, politics—and a clash of civilizations. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| Same Playbook, New Crisis: Canada’s Blind Spot on Fentanyl Networks | 04 Jun 2025 | 00:44:26 | |
In this episode, Sam Cooper sits down with Jason James of BNN to examine The Bureau's months-long investigation into the convergence of Chinese state-backed fentanyl networks, Mexican cartels, and Iranian proxy groups. The conversation revisits key findings from Wilful Blindness (2021), which first exposed how Vancouver’s port and economy were exploited as gateways for China’s transnational narcotics and money laundering operations. Together, Sam and Jason unpack why U.S. authorities are now publicly affirming the very networks and vulnerabilities previously dismissed in Canada—and why, despite mounting evidence, a bloc within Canadian politics and media continues to fiercely deny the scope of the threat. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| The Bureau Podcast: In Jerusalem with Adam Zivo, As IDF Targets the 'Big Boss' | 18 Jun 2025 | 00:42:33 | |
In this urgent breaking edition of The Bureau, investigative journalist Sam Cooper connects with frequent contributor Adam Zivo, live from Jerusalem, as day six of the war between Israel and Iran unfolds. Despite headlines warning of global escalation, Zivo reports a surprisingly calm atmosphere in Israel—even as tensions peak with Iran’s Supreme Leader threatening “irreparable damage” should the United States join Israel’s military operations. Zivo shares that the Israeli public has largely accepted direct conflict with Iran as inevitable, viewing the regime in Tehran—the “big boss” of proxy militias across the region—as the true adversary. In a shift, many Israelis, he says, believe military focus should pivot away from Gaza and directly toward Iran. Meanwhile, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismissed President Trump’s call for “unconditional surrender” in a televised statement, warning that U.S. military intervention would be met with devastating consequences. Trump, who has signaled reluctance to enter another Middle East war, warned this week that “our patience is wearing thin.” As the conflict deepens, this episode brings rare insight into how Israel is absorbing the war’s escalation—and where public opinion may be pushing next. Key Topics: * Zivo’s firsthand account of Jerusalem’s mood amid war * Public sentiment in Israel on Iran vs. Gaza * The potential for U.S. military involvement * Strategic implications of a broader regime-targeting campaign Listen now for exclusive on-the-ground reporting and sharp geopolitical analysis from The Bureau. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| From Deng Xiaoping to Fentanyl: The CCP’s Long Game to Infiltrate North America | 24 Jun 2025 | 01:06:20 | |
OTTAWA–LOS ANGELES — In this special investigative discussion, Sam Cooper sits down with Chris Meyer of WideFountain to dissect the Chinese Communist Party’s long game—and its convergence with transnational organized crime—in infiltrating North America’s western front. As The Bureau prepares a sweeping timeline investigation into Chinese, Mexican, and Iranian threat networks saturating Vancouver, Meyer offers a penetrating historical lens: tracing how CCP leadership, beginning in the Deng Xiaoping era, allegedly embraced corruption, money laundering, and narcotics as instruments of geopolitical disruption aimed squarely at the West. Together, Cooper and Meyer begin connecting the transpacific dots—from encrypted communications firms and the emergence of fentanyl labs in Vancouver, to the rise of Sam Gor, China’s most powerful narco-trafficking syndicate, and its suspected ties to Beijing’s internal security apparatus. They examine how United Front and military intelligence strategies, launched more than four decades ago, set out to infiltrate North America—beginning with Los Angeles and Vancouver, while simultaneously targeting the White House—through ports, political networks, and elite capture. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||
| The Quiet Invasion: A Podcast Investigation into Canada’s Criminal Capture | 04 Jul 2025 | 00:53:42 | |
OTTAWA/LOS ANGELES — Chris Meyer of Widefountain returns to question The Bureau on findings from The Quiet Invasion—a landmark timeline investigation into how Vancouver became a beachhead for transnational organized crime and Chinese hybrid warfare. What began in the late 1980s as low-profile infiltration by Chinese Triads has evolved into a full-spectrum crisis involving encrypted telecoms, fentanyl superlabs, and political access reaching Canada’s highest offices. In this episode, Meyer and Sam Cooper discuss the range of findings, including Canadian vulnerabilities now believed to be of deep concern to the U.S. government. For example, one firm in a cluster of Vancouver-based encrypted communications companies—linked to Mexican cartels, Hezbollah narco-terror networks, and PRC-affiliated clients, and flagged by U.S. agencies—was found to share an address with a chemical import business. That company received at least 85 tons of precursor chemicals used in the production of fentanyl, methamphetamine, and MDMA. The shipments coincided with the early explosion of fentanyl overdoses across Canada—and what Five Eyes enforcement experts now identify as a dual-threat: a tech front shielding cartel and Chinese actors, while facilitating the chemical backbone of the opioid crisis. The Bureau is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thebureau.news/subscribe | |||