Counter-narrative and counter-disinformation programmes have failed systematically against four of the most consequential adversarial formations of the past half-century — not because they were underfunded or poorly designed, but because they were operating at the wrong level. Recognition rather than persuasion is the operative success criterion of political-warfare operations that have achieved durable effect: Pan-Slavism, Irish republicanism, the Sunni apocalyptic tradition, and the Marxist-Leninist revolutionary formation each succeeded not by advancing propositions that recipients assessed and accepted, but by activating pre-installed cognitive substrate that made externally supplied content feel like a truth already known. This note introduces ontological infrastructure as a three-dimensional analytical concept — cognitive-semiotic legibility, moral compulsion, and emotional necessity — that explains both the mechanism of docking and the pattern of differential uptake. Four cross-wave, cross-civilisational cases demonstrate structural convergence across ideologically incompatible formations. Dugin's Fourth Political Theory is analysed as the first deliberate systematisation of this mechanism at state scale, explaining why the fifth wave's composite ideological profile is an operational strategy rather than an analytical confusion. Recognising the ontological level is not a theoretical exercise. It is the condition for detection.
Iliyan Kuzmanov (Sun,) studied this question.