adam zivo national post intelligence collaborator ukraine
© FrontlineNational Post journalist Adam Zivo acted an operative for Canadian and Ukrainian intelligence services.
Canada's National Post is refusing to comment after one of its columnists revealed himself to be a collaborator with Western-aligned intelligence agencies. A Canadian activist is now threatening to sue the paper after the confessed spy smeared him in a front page article.

Adam Zivo, a columnist who covered the war in Ukraine for Canada's National Post newspaper, has outed himself as an operative of Canadian and Ukrainian intelligence. The admission came as Zivo publicly leapt to the defense of Canada's Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), in response to a wave of online mockery directed towards a post by the spy agency which asked readers, "Has a stranger ever tried to inflate your ego?," before warning them that such flattery "could be elicitation."

"People are dunking on this tweet but this actually happened to me in Odesa in early 2023 with a guy who seemed to be a Chinese spy," Zivo volunteered. "I ended up organizing a small sting operation with two Ukrainian intelligence officers to figure out what his deal was," he declared.

In a subsequent post, Zivo expanded on his repeated attempts to entrap a man he had encountered in Odessa, and whom he claimed was a Chinese intelligence agent. "I met the Chinese man and his wife at a restaurant while wearing a wire," while "SBU officers watched us from a car parked outside, which had tinted windows," Zivo stated.

He told Canada's PressProgress that following his meeting with the supposed Chinese agent, "I drafted a detailed report which I quickly provided to the National Post, CSIS [Canadian Security Intelligence Service] and the Ukrainian government. After the recorded dinner, I produced transcripts and a follow-up report which was also shared with these stakeholders."

The National Post has so far refused to comment on the revelation. As PressProgress reported, "National Post Editor-in-Chief Rob Roberts and Managing Editor Carson Jerema did not respond to several requests for comment."

In response to questions to that publication, Zivo insisted he kept his bosses at the National Post updated about his intelligence activities.

"I informed them of what was occurring and that I was working with local authorities to address my safety concerns," Zivo said, though he reportedly insisted later that he "did not run this by my editors for a sign off," because, since he was a "freelancer, not a staff writer," he did not "need permission."

According to Zivo, his working relationship with Canadian and Ukrainian intelligence services began in late 2022. None of his articles published in the National Post have disclosed his ties to foreign or domestic spy agencies.

Since then, Zivo has zealously advocated for rapid deliveries of heavy weapons to Ukraine. He has also used his column as a platform for denigrating those he deemed an impediment to the war effort - including both the Canadian military and the nation of Germany, which he accused of "reckless greed and a callous disregard for eastern European lives" for initially declining to send tanks to Ukraine.
Dimitri Lascaris
© Just Peace AdvocatesDimitri Lascaris is a Canadian lawyer who advocates for peace with Russia
Among Zivo's targets was Dimitri Lascaris, a Canadian lawyer who narrowly lost the Canadian Green Party's 2020 leadership election. In early 2023, Zivo made Lascaris the subject of a front-page report entitled, "Former Green party leadership candidate goes to Moscow to whitewash war." In the column, Zivo accused Lascaris of "pro-Putin sympathies," "seemingly endorsing pro-Kremlin propaganda," and "uncritically and reflexively taking Russia's side."

Zivo also rang up the co-leader of Canada's Green Party, Jonathan Pednault, to solicit criticism of Lascaris. In a parenthetical, Zivo stated that he had helped facilitate a solidarity tour of Kiev for Pednault, and "introduced him to some contacts for his trip, such as local Jewish and LGBTQ leaders."

While hinting at his ties to the Ukrainian government, Zivo neglected once again to disclose his role as an intelligence collaborator.

"No corporate media outlet in Canada has taken an interest in this story"

Following Zivo's unmasking as a Ukrainian intelligence collaborator, Lascaris took to social media to argue the reporter-turned-spook "perpetrated a fraud by concealing from me and the public his spying activities," then proceeded to write an "article about me [which] falsely insinuated that I was working in the service of the Russian government."

"The supreme irony here is that it was Zivo - not me - who was acting as a government agent," Lascaris explained.

In comments to The Grayzone, Lascaris remarked that
"Zivo has also violated the journalistic values of transparency and integrity because he secured an interview with me on false pretences, and when the National Post published Zivo's many articles about the Ukraine war, neither Zivo nor the Post disclosed to the public that Zivo was a spy."
Zivo has previously described himself as a "journalist," "content vendor," "filmmaker," "activist" and - apparently ironically - as a "geopolitical analyst via an ecosystem of NATO-affiliated NGOs."

Lascaris dismissed these labels as window dressing. "There's now little doubt that Zivo wears only one hat: he is a shill for the Western military industrial complex," he said.

"There are probably many more 'journalists' like Zivo in the Western corporate media. What is unusual about Zivo is that he bragged publicly about being a spy for Western intelligence agencies," Lascaris added.

It is unknown whether other intelligence operatives are employed by the National Post, or its parent company, Postmedia News, which is owned by a pro-Trump hedge fund in the US known as Chatham Asset Management.

Describing Postmedia as "fanatically pro-Israel," Lascaris accused the company's newspapers of "attacking me for the past eight years," noting that the hit pieces "started around the time that I became a prominent advocate for Palestinian human rights in Canada."

But for Lascaris, deploying an actual spy to imply he was acting as a Kremlin asset was a step too far. He now says he is considering legal action against the National Post and its parent company, Postmedia News, which is Canada's largest newspaper publisher.

"Because Zivo misled me... I sent a letter to the National Post's editor-in-chief in which I threatened to sue the Post for fraud," Lascaris explained, adding: "I'm awaiting the editor's response."

A handful of Canadian journalists have condemned Zivo on an individual basis, with the President of the Canadian Association of Journalists, Brent Jolly, describing Zivo's intelligence activities as "problematic" and "ethically murky." Jolly told PressProgress: "I don't think we can go around and just have people one minute working for CSIS and the next writing a story about what an amazing job CSIS is doing."

Sonya Fatah, the Associate Chair of Toronto Metropolitan University's School of Journalism, described Zivo's actions as a major breach of journalistic ethics, stating: "I imagine most newsrooms would be horrified."

But so far, Canadian mainstream media has done its best to ignore Zivo's disturbing double game.

"As far as I know, no corporate media outlet in Canada has taken an interest in this story," Lascaris said. "Although I am well known to the corporate media, no Canadian corporate media outlet has sought comment from me about this scandal."

But outside the Western media bubble, Lascaris said he suspects that Zivo's activities will have dangerous repercussions.

"It's almost certain that Zivo's admission will heighten Russian suspicions about Western corporate journalists. And it's not just Russia. China and other states targeted by Western government belligerence are sure to take these revelations into account in their dealings with Western journalists," according to Lascaris.

"Zivo said that his employer knew about his activities. As far as I know, Postmedia has not denied this, nor has it taken any action against Zivo. The logical inference to draw is that Canada's largest newspaper publisher believes that Zivo did nothing wrong."

Zivo's admission that he worked with intelligence services "will only heighten the belief in Russia, China and elsewhere that Western media have been coopted by, and have become tools of, hostile Western governments" Lascaris emphasized.

"In essence, the National Post's response to this scandal will inevitably make it harder for Western journalists to do their jobs in the non-Western world."