The future war over Nigeria may not begin at the border. It may begin in the feed, argues
K BOLANLE ATI-JOHN
For too long, social media has been treated as entertainment, expression, youth culture, political noise or private choice. That view is now dangerously inadequate. The digital public square has become something far more consequential. It is a behavioural environment, a psychological marketplace, a political amplifier, a social battlefield and, increasingly, a national security domain.
Nigeria and Africa must therefore ask a question that goes beyond technology: who is shaping the mind of the nation?
The issue is not simply whether children spend too much time online. That is only the visible surface. Beneath it lies a deeper struggle over attention, identity, aspiration, social cohesion, public trust, truth and national destiny. A country may protect its borders, oilfields, banks, ports and military bases, yet still lose control of the forces shaping the imagination of its next generation.
That is the new sovereignty question.
The digital environment is not neutral. More importantly, it is asymmetric. The ordinary citizen enters social media with curiosity, boredom, grievance, loneliness, ambition, insecurity, desire or fear. The dominant platforms arrive with engineers, behavioural insights, machine learning systems, psychological design, engagement metrics, advertising incentives and vast quantities of personal data. The individual thinks he is merely scrolling. The system is learning him.
It learns what angers him, what frightens him, what flatters him, what makes him compare himself with others, what keeps him awake, what brings him back, what makes him share, what makes him attack and what makes him believe. That is not a neutral exchange. It is human vulnerability meeting industrialised behavioural optimisation.
This is why the old argument that people should simply be left to choose for themselves is insufficient. Choice assumes a reasonably equal field. But in the digital environment, the field is unequal. The user sees content. The platform sees patterns. The user reacts. The platform predicts. The user thinks he is exercising freedom. The platform has already designed the room in which that freedom is being exercised.
In an asymmetric digital environment, non-intervention is not neutrality. It is exposure to manipulation.
Children are the first victims because they are the most vulnerable. Their judgment, impulse control, identity, self-worth, emotional regulation and attention span are still developing. Yet they are placed before systems designed to defeat adult discipline. They face infinite scrolling, autoplay, streaks, likes, notifications, algorithmic feeds, public comparison, stranger contact, sexualised content, bullying, grooming, sextortion and the fear of missing out. Childhood becomes a marketplace. Attention becomes inventory. Emotion becomes data.
But adults are not immune. They too are caught in loops of outrage, vanity, tribal loyalty, political suspicion, social comparison, conspiracy, gambling, influencer worship, religious manipulation and permanent distraction. The same mechanisms that weaken a child’s concentration can weaken an adult’s judgment. The same algorithmic rabbit holes that capture teenagers can radicalise voters, inflame communities and delegitimise institutions.
This is where the matter moves from welfare to statecraft.
Nigeria offers a painful example. Our social media spaces are not merely arenas of debate. They have become theatres of digital combat. Every election, killing, court judgment, policy failure, police incident, religious controversy or ethnic dispute is quickly dragged into the furnace of suspicion. Algorithms then reward the loudest, angriest and most divisive voices because outrage produces engagement. In such an environment, grievance does not remain linear. It becomes geometric. A careless post becomes a trend, a trend becomes a tribe, a tribe becomes a mob, and a mob can become a security threat.
The platform may claim neutrality, but in a fragile society, algorithmic amplification is never neutral. It can turn national disagreement into national combustion.
Nigeria has already seen glimpses of this. During moments such as #EndSARS and recent election cycles, digital platforms did not merely carry public anger; they shaped its tempo, visibility, emotional register and international reach. The grievances were real. The mobilisation was not invented by algorithms. But the digital environment altered the speed, scale and volatility of the contest over legitimacy.
That is why Nigerians now often combat one another online with frightening ferocity. The individual actor believes he is defending his tribe, faith, party, region, leader, grievance or moral position. But beneath the surface, invisible forces may be shaping what he sees, how often he sees it, which voices are amplified, which enemies are framed, which emotions are triggered and which reactions are rewarded.
The most dangerous manipulation is the one citizens experience as their own anger.
Many Nigerians fighting one another online do not realise that they are also being fought over. Their anger is harvested, their identity is activated, their fears are amplified, and their loyalties are converted into data, influence, money and sometimes political power. A country is in danger when its citizens become foot soldiers in information battles they do not know they are fighting.
South Africa offers a continental warning. Xenophobic violence there long predates the smartphone age, and it would be dishonest to pretend that social media created the underlying grievances of unemployment, crime anxiety, migration pressure and political failure. But the digital layer matters. Anti-migrant narratives, vigilante mobilisation, inflammatory claims and misrepresented videos can travel faster than institutions can verify them. What begins as local resentment can become continental anger, diplomatic strain, retaliatory threats and a wider crisis of African solidarity. Platforms may not create a society’s fractures, but they can accelerate them, monetise them and make them harder to contain.
It is important, however, to distinguish between two related but different dangers. The first is commercial: platforms optimise for engagement, attention and advertising value, often rewarding outrage, novelty and emotional intensity. The second is strategic: hostile actors, political entrepreneurs, extremist networks or foreign influence operations can exploit that already-primed environment for mobilisation, disinformation or destabilisation. The platform may not intend national harm. But by organising attention around emotional intensity, it can create the terrain on which others conduct influence operations.
This leads directly to fifth-generation warfare.
Fifth-generation warfare, however debated as a term, captures a real strategic condition: conflict increasingly targets perception, identity, behaviour, legitimacy, trust and decision-making before the target even realises it is under attack. The battlefield may not look like a battlefield. The attacker may not wear a uniform. The weapon may not be a missile. The combatant may not know he is a combatant. The platform may not admit it is a battlespace.
The objective is simple: make the target society weaken itself.
In this form of warfare, hostile actors do not always need to create new grievances. They can exploit existing ones. They can amplify ethnic suspicion, deepen religious resentment, promote institutional cynicism, flood public discourse with contradictions, mobilise outrage, manufacture trends, distort elections, delegitimise courts, discredit security agencies, and make citizens believe nothing is true except the version supplied by their tribe.
The goal is not always to persuade everyone of one lie. Sometimes it is enough to destroy confidence in truth itself.
Once citizens distrust one another, distrust institutions, distrust elections, distrust media, distrust courts, distrust security agencies, distrust leadership and distrust national purpose, the state becomes difficult to govern except by patronage, coercion or cynicism. Development becomes nearly impossible. Reform becomes suspect. Compromise becomes betrayal. National imagination collapses into permanent accusation.
This is why social media can no longer be treated only as free expression. Free expression is vital. Citizens must be free to criticise government, expose injustice, challenge incompetence, debate policy and hold power accountable. No serious society should use digital safety as an excuse for censorship or partisan repression.
But the defence of free expression must not blind us to the existence of algorithmically amplified social harm. A democracy must distinguish between legitimate dissent and engineered destabilisation. It must distinguish between opinion and manipulation. It must distinguish between open debate and behavioural exploitation. It must distinguish between criticism of government and systematic destruction of public trust by foreign or domestic actors who profit from national fracture.
Any doctrine of cognitive security must therefore begin with distrust of both unchecked platforms and unchecked government. Nigeria cannot protect citizens from algorithmic manipulation by handing vague censorship powers to the state. Any framework must be statute-based, judicially reviewable, transparent, independently audited, time-bound in emergency use and insulated from partisan control. No administration should be allowed to secretly throttle dissent, criminalise criticism or label civic mobilisation as destabilisation merely because it is inconvenient.
The target is not dissent. The target is asymmetric behavioural power operating in a low-trust, high-grievance society without adequate constitutional governance.
China’s approach to children and digital platforms is politically unsuitable for a constitutional democracy, but strategically revealing. It recognises that the digital formation of children and youth is a matter of national destiny. Britain, the European Union and Australia are also moving, from different constitutional traditions, toward the same broad conclusion: serious states no longer treat children’s digital environments as harmless private consumption. The lesson is not authoritarian control. The lesson is seriousness.
A serious state does not leave the attention, habits, discipline, values and aspirations of its young people entirely to commercial algorithms.
A country that allows foreign-owned, profit-driven platforms to shape what its children admire, what its youth imitate, what its citizens fear, what its voters believe and what its communities resent has surrendered part of its sovereignty. Sovereignty is no longer only territorial. It is cognitive. It concerns the power to protect the mental, moral and informational environment in which a people forms judgment and pursues destiny.
Africa must understand this quickly.
The continent is young. Nigeria is exceptionally young. If the habits of this generation are shaped by fraud glamour, betting addiction, sexual exposure, ridicule culture, tribal contempt, religious manipulation, political rage, shallow celebrity, consumer fantasy and permanent distraction, then Africa’s demographic advantage may become a demographic liability.
This is not an indictment of young Nigerians. Many use digital platforms for learning, business, creativity, activism, humour, community and survival. The problem is not youth expression. The problem is an economic and technological environment that converts frustration into spectacle, vulnerability into profit and grievance into mobilisation.
A continent cannot build industrial power, scientific depth, military seriousness, ethical citizenship and productive economies on a digital culture that rewards vulgarity, impatience, resentment and illusion. A nation’s future is shaped by what its young people repeatedly see, admire, imitate and desire.
This is why Nigeria needs a doctrine of cognitive security and digital sovereignty. Not censorship. Not thought control. Not protection of government from criticism. A serious doctrine would protect children, citizens, institutions and national cohesion from behavioural exploitation, algorithmic manipulation, foreign influence and digitally amplified self-destruction.
Such a doctrine should begin with children. Children should not use the same internet as adults. Platforms operating in Nigeria should be required to provide mandatory youth modes with time limits, night restrictions, no stranger messaging, no targeted gambling advertising, betting inducements or gambling-like design features aimed at minors, no sexualised recommendation pathways, no predatory livestream features and strict protections against grooming, sextortion and bullying. Targeted advertising to children should be heavily restricted. Addictive design features aimed at minors should be treated as public harm.
The doctrine should then extend to platforms. Companies that shape Nigeria’s public conversation must be accountable to Nigerian law. They should provide algorithmic risk assessments, transparency on political advertising, mechanisms for detecting coordinated inauthentic behaviour, local channels for lawful escalation during crises, and independent audits of systems that amplify harmful content. A platform that profits from Nigerian attention must carry obligations to Nigerian society.
Nigeria cannot compel global platforms by rhetoric alone. It will need lawful market-access rules, regional coordination through African institutions, alignment with emerging global standards and credible technical capacity. Nigeria’s leverage will be limited if it acts alone, which is why this agenda should ultimately become an African regulatory project rather than a purely Nigerian complaint.
Schools must become part of the defence. Digital literacy should not be a decorative subject. It should teach children how manipulation works, how algorithms reward emotion, how disinformation spreads, how images can deceive, how influencers monetise trust, how FOMO weakens judgment and how to verify before sharing. Attention discipline should become part of education. A child who cannot concentrate cannot learn deeply. A society that cannot concentrate cannot build seriously.
National security institutions must also adapt. Nigeria needs capacity to understand cognitive threats, foreign influence operations, extremist propaganda, digital mobilisation patterns, financial panic narratives, ethnic hate campaigns and fifth-generation warfare dynamics. This does not mean spying on citizens for political purposes. It means recognising that hostile influence today may travel through memes, influencers, hashtags, short videos, diaspora networks, anonymous accounts, artificial amplification and manipulated grievance.
The state must also improve its own conduct. Governments create information vacuums when they communicate late, defensively, arrogantly or dishonestly. In a digital age, silence is not empty. It is occupied by speculation. If government wants citizens to resist manipulation, it must earn trust through speed, transparency, competence and accountability. Strategic communication is now part of national security.
Implementation should be phased and disciplined. First, child digital protection law: youth modes, age-appropriate design, restrictions on betting inducements and stronger protections against predatory contact. Second, platform transparency: political ad libraries, crisis escalation desks and public reporting on coordinated manipulation. Third, education: digital literacy, verification, attention discipline and civic reasoning. Fourth, national security capacity: cognitive threat analysis under law. Fifth, oversight: courts, parliament, data protection regulators, child experts, civil society and independent technical auditors. Because child protection, data governance, cyber regulation and platform accountability cut across federal, state and sectoral jurisdictions, the framework would require careful legislative design rather than executive improvisation.
Nigeria and Africa must move beyond the false choice between authoritarian control and helpless laissez-faire. The real choice is between algorithmic domination by private and foreign interests, and constitutional governance of the digital environment in the public interest.
This is the age of the battle for the mind. The strategic assets of the twenty-first-century state include not only territory, oil, minerals, data centres, ports, satellites, armies and currencies. They include attention, trust, childhood, truth, social cohesion, institutional legitimacy and national imagination.
A country can lose its future without losing a war. It only needs to lose control of the forces shaping its children, citizens, emotions, loyalties, aspirations and public truth.
Nigeria must not wait until the damage becomes irreversible. The feed is no longer merely a feed. It is a school, a market, a battleground, a pulpit, a casino, a theatre, a parliament, a recruiting ground and a mirror. If we do not govern it wisely, it will govern us silently.
The battle for Nigeria’s mind has already begun. The question is whether we understand the battlefield before it is too late.
Rear Admiral Ati-John (Rtd) psc(+) fdc(+) is a Distinguished Fellow of the National Defence College, Abuja, and writes from Lagos.
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