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DefenseBlogsCreating Conspiracy Theories: What Information Warriors Need to Know
Creating Conspiracy Theories: What Information Warriors Need to Know
Defense

Creating Conspiracy Theories: What Information Warriors Need to Know

•February 24, 2026
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Small Wars Journal
Small Wars Journal•Feb 24, 2026

Why It Matters

For information warriors, understanding these models reveals that influence must be shaped upstream, not merely corrected later, and highlights the strategic risks of eroding trust both abroad and at home.

Key Takeaways

  • •Conspiracy narratives shape perception before events occur
  • •ETM outlines five elements needed for resilient conspiracies
  • •Anxiety, social influence, and plausibility drive belief adoption
  • •Counter-messaging often backfires by reinforcing secrecy perception
  • •Weaponized conspiracies risk domestic trust erosion and blowback

Pulse Analysis

In today’s information warfare landscape, conspiracy narratives are no longer fringe curiosities but deliberate strategic tools. By framing uncertainty as existential threat, actors can pre‑emptively shape how audiences interpret events, as seen in the French “La Bleuite” operation and the SolarWinds breach. This upstream influence bypasses traditional propaganda cycles, embedding distrust and suspicion before any kinetic action occurs, and thereby amplifying the psychological impact of a campaign.

The Existential Threat Model (ETM) and the Conspiracy Belief Formation Model together provide a diagnostic framework for planners. ETM’s five pillars—pattern, agency attribution, meaningful threat, coalition, and secrecy—describe the narrative scaffolding that makes conspiracies appear coherent and inevitable. Complementarily, the belief formation model highlights five individual conditions—anxiety, social influence, synergy, plausibility, and unfalsifiability—that convert these narratives into durable convictions. Recognizing how these layers interact enables strategists to anticipate which environments are fertile ground for weaponized conspiracies and to design interventions that address structural vulnerabilities rather than isolated claims.

Counter‑messaging that targets specific falsehoods often backfires because it reinforces the secrecy and threat cues that sustain the conspiracy. Instead, practitioners should focus on disrupting the underlying conditions: reducing chronic anxiety, diversifying trusted information sources, and fostering transparent communication that limits the perceived need for hidden explanations. Failure to manage these dynamics can lead to narrative drift, blowback into domestic spheres, and long‑term erosion of institutional credibility. A nuanced, upstream approach that balances influence objectives with the preservation of trust is essential for sustainable strategic communication.

Creating Conspiracy Theories: What Information Warriors Need to Know

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