Surah 60:1:
O you who have believed, do not take My enemies and your enemies as allies, extending to them affection while they have disbelieved in what came to you of the truth, having driven out the Prophet and yourselves only because you believe in Allah, your Lord..."
The Surah was revealed in response to Hatib ibn Abi Balta'ah, a prominent companion who secretly attempted to send a letter to his family back in pagan Mecca, warning them of Muhammad's impending military movements.
The Security Response: Rather than handling this purely as a localized military espionage breach, the text upgrades the incident into a sweeping, cosmic decree against any form of non-Muslim empathy or familial connection. Verse 1 strictly bans extending even "affection" (mawaddah) to non-Muslim relatives or former neighbors.
The Critique: To a sociologist or political scientist, this represents a textbook mechanism used by high-control political and religious regimes to dismantle organic, pre-existing social structures. By framing natural human affection for old friends and family members as an act of treason against God, the text enforces an absolute psychological break with the past. The state demands that ideological alignment entirely replace blood ties, forcing the individual to derive their identity exclusively from obedience to the centralized authority in Medina.