Exploring the spy domain in psychological operations from the perspective of Islamic jurisprudence
Subject Areas :ali moradi 1 , Mortaza Tabibi Jabali 2 , mohammad ali heidari 3 , Ehsan Ali Akbari Babokani 4
1 - student
2 - Academic
3 - Head of Department figh
4 - هوﺮﮔفرﺎﻌﻣنآﺮﻗوﻞﻫا،ﺖﯿﺒﻟاهﺎﮕﺸﻧاد،نﺎﻬﻔﺻا،نﺎﻬﻔﺻا.ناﺮﯾا
Keywords: jurisprudence, verdict, : psychological operations, spying,
Abstract :
Abstract Throughout history, war has always been a remarkable phenomenon and has been studied from a variety of dimensions. In the past, the attitudes of rulers and politicians to victory over the enemy have been based on military warfare, but in the present time, a new but complex and widespread approach, called war and psychological operations, using different techniques and tools, with many examples, including "spying" Is underway. Spying and the need to identify the boundary between the crime and its permission are important issues that need to be analyzed, since spying in terms of jurisprudence and law has works and rules that can not be carried out on all the examples of that sanction. This article seeks to answer the following questions: What is the scope of spying from the point of view of jurisprudence and Islamic law? And in what cases is it worthy of respect or necessity? The present study was descriptive-analytic and the data was collected by library method and document analysis. The results of the research show that in jurisprudence and Islamic law, the investigation of individuals' personal circumstances is prohibited and immoral, but the search for agents to monitor their work and spy on foreign and domestic enemy's affairs to protect the Islamic system and the security of Muslims is not only forbidden. It is not immoral, but it is imperative and necessary in the wisdom and the wisdom.
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