friend -
i hope you don't mind if i respond here to a number of different comments you've made in various places. basically (for those who haven't picked up on this yet), your opinion appears to be that islam spread peacefully, yet the US (and by extension the "west") is imposing itself by force. now i understand that there are some historians (o'leary being one) who refute the notion of islam having spread by the sword, but it is actually just that, an opinion, rather than an unarguable "fact". part of this case rests upon the notion that islam is unified and has always been so. of course, this hasn't been the case, from the disputed succession of the khalifa onwards. similarly, the ummayads, abbasids and so on and everyone since the "rightly guided" caliphs have been disputed.
by the time that islam arrived in spain, of course, a couple of hundred years have gone past and it is arguable whether *despite* political unification, whether this indeed existed, islam is "one" any more. the rate of expansion alone would argue against this, even if it wasn't done by the sword. quite apart from this, the periodic "back-to-basics" movements that came out of various places within islam represented disunity and have been, in many cases, perfectly capable of "spreading by the sword". take the almohads and almoravids that came out of north africa in the 11th and 12th century - they weren't exactly tolerant of the dhimmis, which is why many jews (including maimonides) left cordoba and went to live in egypt. there is plenty of evidence of "convert or die" and, frankly, to suggest that islam came out of arabia and got all the way to spain without anyone being coerced stretches credibility to beyond the benefit of the doubt. quite apart from this, the idea that in an empire stretching across millions of people, a plethora of cultures and thousands of miles could maintain absolute uniformity without any form of oppression at all, let alone in the absence of advanced communications technology and media is somewhat difficult to accept. with the best will in the world and as well-disposed to islam as i am, i don't see how positions such as o'leary's can be credible.
furthermore, islam may arguably have guaranteed freedom of religion, but being a dhimmi was no picnic - you're still a second-class citizen with less rights than muslims, whether you're a mu'ammin or ahl al-qitab or whatever. it's not equality and freedom as we would understand it nowadays.
as for current oppression, for me the major problem is that i believe islam as i have learned it to be inseparable from *social justice*. an unjust society is *by definition* an unislamic one. i'm quoting an eminent german muslim theologian here, who is a personal friend. thus it is that i say, again repeating her opinion, that there is no "islamic state" currently existing in the world today - not saudi, not iran and not pakistan. which brings me to my other criticism of your position, namely your criticism of the united states et al.
of course, everyone seems to agree nowadays that the spread of christianity throughout europe and the rest of the world was mostly done by force. as a jew i certainly have nothing very nice to say about how they used to behave. where i must strongly differ, however, is that you cannot equate the united states and the west with the crusades. it's a completely specious and self-serving comparison. what we are talking about here is democracy, free speech, human rights and many other things that go with a modern political system. democracy is not "christian". it is not western. there is no reason whatsoever that democracy cannot operate in an islamic country whatever the relationship of islam is to the state. the turks are certainly working on it (although they have a long way to go) as are the afghans, the iranians have some semblance of it, the iraqis are hopefully on their way - and as of yesterday, the palestinians have made an important step away from despotism and personal rule towards a democratic society. if that's what you call the "USA want[ing] to transmit its life system and its belief to other countries by force", i don't see how this is a bad thing.
of course what you are referring to principally is the invasions of iraq and afghanistan. i'm a big fan of "the west wing" (which i recommend you watch, actually) so i think i should quote the "bartlett doctrine" at you - in an age where you can build a bomb [read WMD] in your country and bring it to mine, what goes on in your country becomes my business. in other words, overwhelming military might is no longer a guarantee of safety, as the americans (and the israelis as well) have discovered. therefore, to be safe, it follows that a "friendly society" is the best guarantee of safety. in the past, this has been done by installing a US or western-friendly ruler (like saddam, the saudis, the pahlavis, sadat etc) and letting the actual people of the countries go to hell because, hey, we're getting the oil, let them do our dirty work for us. this is no longer a viable strategy, as iran and afghanistan proved. therefore, to have normal international relations with a country, it is now recognised that you must now make peace with the actual inhabitants of the country, not just a dictator who runs the place for you. i'm not suggesting that this means invading anywhere you want, because that ain't sustainable either and to suggest that this is what the US is up to is to display complete ignorance of its electorate and political realities. people are wise to "grab the natural resources" nowadays - but only in a democracy can you bring your rulers to book for their crimes. give me the choice of that or "rule by the righteous" any time and i know what i'd pick. given their own choice, uninfluenced by invasions, oppressions and maniacs, this is what people will do, just as the palestinians are proving and as, hopefully, the iraqis will do as well if the jihadis fail to terrorise them into submission.
in other words, you can condemn the US all you like, i know it makes you feel better to parrot this crap and toe the party line, but show me a better example of a political system that is working right now in the islamic world. all over the region, forward-looking rulers are trying to democratise, whether you think that's under threat or not. look at musharraf in pakistan, abdullah in jordan, the turks and even assad jr in syria (although it will be a while before he is truly in charge). look at abu mazen. there is hope in democracy, not in force. there has been enough ragged demagoguery, wasted life, corruption and misplaced pride for people to wise up and realise that democracy is actually the system most conducive to being able to live your life according to islamic values. as winston churchill said, the "worst option - until you see the other options".
as for "postmaster" - why do you put israel in quotes? are the jews not also an ancient people? sheesh. as a greek cypriot, you really ought to know better.
b'shalom
bananabrain