Jamestown Foundation report exposes CCP’s massive infiltration in Canada via United Front networks.
Earlier this month, a bombshell report from the U.S. defence policy think tank, Jamestown Foundation, delivered a critical wake-up call that exposed the alarming extent of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) infiltration in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Germany through its United Front Work Department (UFWD) network. [The full report is available at the publisher’s website here—Harnessing the People: Mapping Overseas United Front Work in Democratic States].
For Canada, the report revealed some particularly disturbing developments. With more than 2,000 UFWD-linked organizations identified in the four democratic states studied, Canada was found to host the second-largest network at 575 entities.
According to Cheryl Yu, the report’s author and a Fellow in China Studies at The Jamestown Foundation, the United Front is a foundational pillar of Chinese foreign meddling that succeeds, not through crude espionage or illegal acts, but rather a sophisticated, covert operation masquerading as community engagement, designed to manipulate narratives, silence dissent, and bend political discourse to Beijing’s will. By embedding networks that shape social, political, economic, and cultural environments to align with Beijing’s interests, the UFWD approach exploits the openness of democratic societies, making it hard to detect and counter, while enabling broader threats.
Yu describes the high number of UFWD-linked organizations in Canada alone, uncovered with limited time and resources, as merely the “visible layer” of a much larger operating system that continues to expand. This hidden growth, she says, allows for rapid mobilization at scale without appearing centrally directed.
At its core, Yu warns the United Front thrives on deception, embedding itself in vibrant civil societies through emotional appeals and informal relationships that often ensnare unwitting Chinese Canadians, turning “normal engagement” into strategic leverage before societies realize the shift. This extensive web of influence spans various sectors, from cultural associations to business groups, all operating under the guise of benign activities. The CCP’s strategy is to politicize every aspect of society without resorting to confrontation. This means that while these activities may appear harmless, they are part of a calculated effort to embed CCP influence deeply within Canadian institutions.
For Canadians the consequences are real, with reports of activists being surveilled and families threatened. Beyond the scope of Yu’s report, other examples reveal the CCP’s intricate influence connections to other national security threats, including money laundering and organized crime, creating a hybrid threat landscape that Canada is ill-equipped to handle.
Cheryl Yu Explains the Threat to Canada in 4 Powerful Minutes
The video below is a recording of the report’s launch in Ottawa on Feb. 11 at a news conference hosted by the Macdonald-Laurier Institute (MLI). Former MP Kevin Vuong—an alleged target of a CCP “honey trap” plot designed to disrupt his 2021 election campaign—introduces Cheryl Yu, who is also joined by Peter Mattis, president of the Jamestown Foundation, and former Lt. Gen. Christopher Coates, the director of foreign policy, national defence, and national security at MLI.
At the conclusion of the conference, the pressing question is not whether CCP infiltration in the democratic fabric of the country exists, but whether Canada will take the necessary steps to confront this pervasive foreign influence before it erodes the very foundations of democracy. The clock is ticking.
Categories: by Lisa Peryman, Foreign Interference, Security


