In other words your whole thesis just backfired since if "el" is a pagan god so is Allah. Now, if you don't like my rebuttals bear in mind I told you I was not interested in another Muslim attempting to obfuscate truth and appealing to "western scholars" works against Islam in the same way you have appealed to "western scholars" to attack Judaism and Christianity.
Oh, and your appeal to terms used in western logic only confirms my opinion of your purpose for this thread. Judaism is not a western religion and since Christianity is an offshoot of Judaism the only way you will truly understand both is to think with more of an oriental mindset. The reason Catholicism and the Orthodox churches got so much wrong is they both used "western" philosophical concepts to interpret the Hebrew Scriptures.
As to any reply you choose to make I am finished with your attempt to show that "el" is actually the proper name for a pagan god. The fact is all pagan gods had a name like Baal or Dagon and "el" was a name/title like doctor. You see Andrew mythology was a passion of mine when I was in school. I wrote several papers on myths, including creation and flood myths that covered Egypt, Assyria, Canaan, indigenous North and South American tribes, and Asia. What you have appealed to is basic anthropology theories concerning the development of religions in the Middle East.
Now if and I emphasize the "if" you want to get down and dirty concerning Christianity vs. Islam you will discuss what each religion teaches. I can make a good case that Muhammad (or whoever compiled the Qur'an) plagiarized 2nd-4th century deuterocanonical and apocryphal Christian, Gnostic, and pagan Arab sources. In other words the Qur'an is a book of fiction.