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In Agent of Change Huda Mukbil takes us behind the curtain of a
leading spy agency during a fraught time, recounting her
experiences as an intelligence officer for the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service. Mukbil was the first Black Arab-Canadian
Muslim woman to join CSIS and was at the forefront of the fight
against terrorism after 9/11. Mukbil’s mastery of four languages
quickly made her a counterterrorism expert and a uniquely valuable
asset to the organization. But as she worked with colleagues to
confront new international threats, she also struggled for
acceptance and recognition at the agency. Following the
American-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the rise of homegrown
extremism, Mukbil was framed as an inside threat. Determined to
prove her loyalty, while equally concerned about the surveillance
and profiling of Muslims and revelations of Western agencies’
torture and torture by proxy, Mukbil started to question CSIS’s
fluctuating ethical stance in relation to its mandate. Her stellar
work on a secondment to MI5, the British Security Service, earned
commendation; this shielded her, but only temporarily, from the
hostile workplace culture at CSIS. Ultimately, Mukbil and a group
of colleagues went public about the pervasive institutional
discrimination undermining CSIS and national security from within.
Mukbil’s expertise in international security and her commitment
to workplace transparency drove important changes at CSIS.
Dazzlingly written, her account is an eye-opener for anyone wanting
to understand how racism, misogyny, and Islamophobia undermine not
only individuals, but institutions and the national interest –
and how addressing this openly can tackle populism and
misinformation.
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