Cognitive Warfare as a Strategic Dilemma: A Game-Theoretic Model of Censorship and Distrust

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Abstract

Cognitive warfare is an area of increased scrutiny and concern worldwide. This paper argues that States that are increasingly employing censorship under the guise of combating "misinformation" may inadvertently replicate the cognitive warfare tactics they seek to defeat, to their own detriment. An iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma framework is proposed here to model such self-defeating strategies, where fear and anger drive societies toward distrust of their own government as well as an irrational acceptance of non-aligned information and propaganda. We formalize the role of the discount factor ( δ ) in determining whether states prioritize short-term control or long-term trust and analyze how censorship, in practice, fuels conspiracy theories, exemplified by the COVID-19 suppression of lab-leak hypotheses, later suggested by evidence. The model demonstrates that pluralistic discourse, not restrictive measures, is the dominant strategy for increasing δ and, ultimately, democratic resilience.

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