The fact that the Geneva Conventions on war rules have been systematically violated in almost every war don’t make them responsible of this violation.
The Geneva Conventions do not know an individual duty to enagage in war. So them being to some extent open to abuse is very different from the potential abuse of the duty to fight in defensive warfare in islamic theology.
Support to terrorist attacks in Europe and the USA can be more or less widespread in Muslim countries —it is difficult to quantify, but recent polls show that it is very limited— but it is not directly related to the reading of the Koran. Imperialist wars don’t need the Koran to find an excuse.
But they make them easier to jurstify and make recruitment easier.
Because there is no need to convince majorities that there is an offensive war against Islam/some islamic country going on to exploit the individual duty for defensive war; it is sufficient to convince 5-10% of the able bodied male population; then one has hypothetically tens or hundreds of thousands people prone to recruitment, because based upon their individual perception of the situation they would have to affirm that they have individually the duty to join the war.
This means that the use of the Koran as excuse for imperialist wars is not as broad as it was in other times —Ummaya caliphate,
You seem to hold 3 positions:
1. In the ummaya caliphate the Koran was interpreted to provide excuses for "imperialist wars".
2. With better interpretation the Koran cannot be exploited in such way or at least a lot less.
3. For the interpretation of the Koran the Hadiths are a necessary tool that must be used.
Let me provide one piece of evidence in regard to this 3 positions:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadith#History
"According to British historian of Arab world Alfred Guillaume, it is "certain" that "several small collections" of hadith were "assembled in Umayyad times."[24]"
So your position seems to be that using the texts intially being compiled by those using the Koran to generate excuses for "imperialist wars" as interpretation tool will minimize the potential for generating excuses for "imperialist wars" from the Koran.
I do not think that this is realy your view; cause it so ridiculously contradictory.
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