I want to solve the following optimization problem
\begin{align} \inf_{ X: |X| \le a \text{ a.s.}} E \left[ \frac{1}{1+(X-X^\prime)^2} \right] \end{align} where $X^\prime$ is an independent copy of $X$ and $a>0$ is some constant.
How would one approach such a problem. Is the solution easy to find?
At some point I thought that the optimal distribution is given by $X=\{-a,a\}$ equally likely. In which case, the solution is given by \begin{align} \inf_{ X: |X| \le a \text{ a.s.}} E \left[ \frac{1}{1+(X-X^\prime)^2} \right] \le \frac{1}{2}\frac{1}{1+4a^2}+\frac{1}{2}. \end{align} However, I don't have any supporting arguments for this.
The following might be useful. Note that by Jensens' inequality
\begin{align} E \left[ \frac{1}{1+(X-X^\prime)^2} \right] \ge \frac{1}{1+E[(X-X^\prime)^2]} =\frac{1}{1+2Cov(X)} \end{align}