Russia has come to rely on Iranian-made drones to attack Ukrainian soldiers, civilians and infrastructure
A police officer inspects parts of an unmanned aerial vehicle , what Ukrainian authorities consider to be an Iranian made suicide drone, at a site of a Russian strike on fuel storage facilities in Kharkiv, Ukraine on Oct. 6, 2022.Canadian academics have been collaborating with Iranian universities on drone technology and other research that could benefit Tehran’s armed forces and that country’s allies.
Neil Bisson, a former senior intelligence officer with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, said Western academics often fail to understand that hostile countries like Iran will use university collaboration as a means to give them military advantage. In January, Ottawa announced strict new national-security rules to protect cutting-edge science and advanced technology from ending up in the hands of China, Russia and Iran, including research in unmanned aerial vehicles .
Ottawa has banned federal granting agencies and the Canada Foundation for Innovation from funding sensitive technology research at any university, laboratory and research institution that co-operates with military, national defence or state security bodies of countries posing a risk to Canada. Last January, The Globe reported that researchers at 50 Canadian universities, including the University of Waterloo, University of Toronto, University of British Columbia and McGill University, conducted and published joint scientific papers from 2005 to 2022 with scientists connected to China’s military, according to research provided by U.S. strategic intelligence company Strider Technologies Inc.
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