News Analysis Security expert Julian Spencer-Churchill questions why Canada can’t convict any Chinese spies. “We have a history of being infiltrated. We have no one convicted. And based upon rates of what’s going on in America [regarding convicting spies], we should have done it,” Spencer-Churchill, an associate professor of international relations at Concordia University, said in an interview. His comments come after a recent case where a man accused of offering to provide Canadian military secrets to China was allowed, due to delays, to walk free without facing trial. In December, the Ontario Superior Court stayed criminal proceedings against Hamilton resident Qing Quentin Huang, citing unreasonable delays by the prosecution in bringing the matter to trial. Huang was arrested eight years ago, in 2013, for allegedly plotting to send classified information on Canada’s shipbuilding strategy to China. In a recent iPolitics commentary, Spencer-Churchill explores some potential underlying reasons for the lack of convictions, including …