
Canada is building institutional capacity to counter Russian hybrid warfare and disinformation, but its own intelligence agencies say the threat is outpacing the response, outgoing Canadian Ambassador to Ukraine Natalka Cmoc said in an interview with Ukrinform on 1 July 2026, on the eve of Canada Day — her last before ending her three-year posting in Kyiv.
Russia’s covert disinformation apparatus has been expanding globally, with networks operating independently of state media to spread false narratives across Western societies, targeting support for Ukraine and undermining democratic institutions.
What the ambassador said
Cmoc cited two programs Canada initiated together with partners:
- The first is an academy that supports analysts and enables information-sharing with partner countries to build stronger counter-tools.
- The second is a fund for those who fall victim to hybrid attacks — organizations, individuals, or NGOs that may lack the capacity to resist them on their own.
Canada’s Senate committee on national defence and security released a report on 30 April 2026 calling Russian disinformation an urgent threat to Canada’s national security, democratic institutions, and social cohesion. Russia’s disinformation has been growing and evolving at a rapid pace, the committee found, adding that Canada’s capacity to respond does not match the scale of the threat.
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) backed up the report’s findings in a concurrent annual release, confirming that Russian state actors have carried out information and influence operations in Canada, exploiting contentious social topics to discredit the government’s position on Ukraine by polarizing segments of both the political and public spectrums.
CSIS noted it “continues to identify, investigate, and reduce Russia’s adaptive and sophisticated disinformation methods.”
The ground-level effects are visible
Canada’s National Security Advisor Nathalie Drouin warned Parliament in February 2026 that more Canadians were beginning to accept the Kremlin’s narrative that Kyiv — not Moscow — provoked the 2022 full-scale invasion. Russian narratives targeting Canada cluster around three patterns:
- fiscal resentment toward aid for Ukraine,
- false-pacifism framing designed to undercut Canada’s image as a peaceful nation,
- personal attacks on Ukrainian-Canadian public figures
Most visibly the coordinated campaign against former Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland’s Ukrainian grandparents and their wartime history.
Canada’s moves reflect a broader pattern among G7 nations of building shared infrastructure to track and counter Russian information operations, a shift from reactive debunking toward proactive institutional capacity meant to outlast any single election or news cycle. Russia allocates over $1 billion annually to disinformation and propaganda, suggesting the gap between attacker and defender remains wide.