By Stephen Nagy, April 21, 2026
The geopolitics of the Indo-Pacific are shifting rapidly, demanding a rigorous recalibration of how middle powers like Canada and Japan approach national security. Yet, a troubling dissonance plagues Canada’s public discourse, driven by a national media apparatus that frequently substitutes ideological framing for objective geopolitical analysis.
A recent CBC News segment characterizing Japan’s defence spending boost as “militarization” perfectly encapsulates this phenomenon. It reveals not only a profound misunderstanding of allied security postures but also exposes deep-seated institutional biases that leave Canada vulnerable to foreign interference and cognitive warfare.
To understand the absurdity of the “militarization” label applied to Tokyo, one must look at the empirical realities of defence economics. Both Canada and Japan have recently committed to reaching the NATO-standard target of spending 2 per cent of their Gross Domestic Product (GDP) on defence. Yet, when Ottawa makes this pledge, it is framed by domestic commentators as a necessary, if belated, step to meet alliance obligations. When Tokyo does the exact same thing, the CBC brands it as “militarization.”
The hypocrisy is laid bare by per capita metrics. The average Canadian pays roughly C$977 per year for defence, compared to approximately C$608 for a Japanese citizen. This means that Canada’s per capita defence burden is already about 60 per cent higher than Japan’s, even as Western media such as CBC labels Japan’s build-up “militarization.”
Japan is not militarizing; it is normalizing its defence posture within the strict confines of its pacifist constitution. It is responding to an increasingly severe regional security environment characterized by a nuclear-armed North Korea, a revanchist Russia, and a highly assertive People’s Republic of China (PRC) engaging in the largest peacetime military buildup in history according to Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). Tokyo’s strategy remains fundamentally defensive. Labeling this as militarization is not merely inaccurate; it inadvertently parrots the strategic narratives of authoritarian adversaries who seek to isolate Japan and fracture the democratic consensus in the Indo-Pacific.
Why, then, does Canada’s public broadcaster peddle such inaccuracies? The answer lies in a pervasive institutional bias that prioritizes specific progressive narratives over objective reporting. As Dave Snow demonstrated in his empirical analysis for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, the CBC frequently “prioritizes allyship over objectivity.” Snow’s research reveals a media culture that heavily skews its source selection to favour critics of traditional policies while marginalizing pragmatic, security-focused views.
This ideological tilt is further corroborated by David Clinton’s recent data-driven analyses in The Audit. Clinton’s examination of CBC’s story selection reveals a stark “institutional viewpoint bias.” The broadcaster consistently amplifies government-friendly narratives while demonstrating a disproportionate hostility toward the United States. Clinton noted that a massive percentage of CBC’s top stories focus obsessively on American political dysfunction, while stories regarding Chinese interference or Chinese Communist Party (CCP) influence in Canada are conspicuously marginalized. While the CBC dedicates vast resources to criticizing democratic allies, it remains dangerously muted on the existential threats posed by authoritarian regimes.
When coverage of the PRC is overwhelmingly positive, with little engagement in widely reported criticisms, it raises legitimate questions about editorial balance and rigour. In an era where states – including the PRC – invest heavily in shaping global narratives, news organizations must be especially vigilant in maintaining independence, transparency, and critical distance. As Anne Marie Brady points out, as analysts of international relations, we cannot be naive to the realities of modern cognitive warfare and the sophisticated tactics employed by the UFWD.
The CCP views the information space as a primary battlespace. This doctrine is foundational to the seminal 1999 PLA text Unrestricted Warfare (超限战 – Chāoxiàn Zhàn), authored by Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui, which advocates bypassing traditional military confrontation through the weaponization of media, law, and economics. To execute this globally, Beijing relies heavily on the UFWD. According to the CCP Central Committee’s own “Regulations on United Front Work” (中国共产党统一战线工作条例 – Zhōngguó Gòngchǎndǎng Tǒngyī Zhànxiàn Gōngzuò Tiáolí), a core mandate is to guide overseas Chinese to “tell China’s story well” and align diaspora voices with Beijing’s geopolitical objectives.
Furthermore, Chinese academic and state directives explicitly outline the strategy of “Public Opinion Warfare” (舆论战 – Yúlùn Zhàn) to shape international “Discourse Power.” Documents detailing this strategy frequently target the US-Japan alliance, instructing state media and overseas proxies to frame Japan’s defence normalization as a resurgence of Second World War-era imperialism. The goal is to sow distrust among Western publics regarding Asian allies.
When these sophisticated, state-backed narratives are injected into the global information ecosystem, they inevitably trickle down into the Canadian media environment. The UFWD specifically targets diaspora communities to co-opt voices and launder state narratives through authentic local messengers. Consequently, when Canadian media platforms uncritically broadcast these anti-Japan narratives, often relying on journalists or commentators who may be unwittingly influenced by the saturated Chinese-language media ecosystem, they serve as conduits for foreign state propaganda. It is a manifestation of what scholars Ronaldo Au-Yeung and Alsu Tagirova describe as the manipulation of democratic loopholes by foreign actors, extending beyond electoral politics into the very fabric of public discourse.
The vulnerability of our media landscape is a critical national security issue. As the 2024 Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) annual report clearly states, China remains the top counter-intelligence threat to Canada, targeting all levels of government and civil society. As Law Professor Yasmin Dawood argues in her analysis of Canada’s “electoral ecosystem,” defending democracy requires protecting the interconnected network of institutions, including the media, from disinformation and cyber threats. An electoral ecosystem relies on a multiplicity of strategies to protect its integrity. When the public broadcaster fails to provide balanced, rigorous analysis, it weakens the entire ecosystem, making the public more susceptible to foreign influence and degrading the quality of democratic debate.
This institutional failure is precisely why robust whistleblower protections are essential. As legal experts Cameron Hutchison and Case Littlewood argue in the Alberta Law Review, the Journalistic Sources Protection Act must be interpreted to fiercely protect national security whistleblowers such as those within CSIS who leaked the extent of foreign interference to the press. These leaks occurred because the internal mechanisms of government and the mainstream media apparatus had failed to adequately address the magnitude of the PRC’s infiltration. When the media is clouded by bias and the government is paralyzed by political calculation, whistleblowers become the last line of defense for democratic transparency.
Canada cannot afford a public broadcaster that views the world through a distorted, ideologically driven lens. The Indo-Pacific is the economic and strategic centre of gravity for the 21st century. Navigating this complex theater requires a clear-eyed understanding of our allies and our adversaries. Japan is a vital democratic partner, anchoring the rules-based international order in Asia. To frame its defensive normalization as “militarization” while ignoring the aggressive expansionism of the PRC is a profound disservice to the Canadian public and a detriment to our foreign policy.
To rectify this, news organizations, governments, and news consumers must demand higher standards of objectivity and geopolitical literacy from our media institutions. We must recognize that disinformation is not solely the domain of foreign troll farms; it can also manifest as institutional bias within our most trusted organizations. As we confront the realities of foreign interference and cognitive warfare, preserving the integrity of our information ecosystem is not just a matter of journalistic ethics, it is an absolute imperative of national security.
Stephen R. Nagy is a professor at the International Christian University, a senior fellow and China project lead at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, and a visiting fellow at the Japan Institute for International Affairs.



