Pierre Trudeau spy unit reflects secrecy of Ottawa toward Quebec sovereignty
MONTREAL — New revelations about a secret anti-sovereigntist spy unit in the office of former prime minister Pierre Trudeau are a sign of how much remains unknown about the federal government’s response to the Quebec independence movement.
According to a recently published paper, the Prime Minister’s Office in the 1970s created the spy group to monitor Quebec sovereigntists, and asked the RCMP to provide it with intelligence — a request that was resisted by the RCMP’s defunct security service.
“We’re talking about the Prime Minister’s Office running a secret intelligence-collection operation and … then wanting the RCMP to contribute collecting intelligence and providing it to this group,” said Dennis Molinaro, who teaches at Ontario Tech University and co-wrote the paper published in the journal Intelligence and National Security.
The paper, based on documents released under access to information laws, alleges that from at least spring 1971 to winter 1972, a secret body known by the code name FAN TAN operated outside Canada’s official intelligence system.