No, it would have been better if we had done neither.
Looking back over the past few years we have interfered in the internal affairs of nations with scant regard for the eventual outcome. Heaven knows why. I would have thought that there are sufficient “wise heads” at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (the permanent staff, not the politicians) to know better. But I’m obviously wrong.
Looking particularly at the “Arab Spring” we assisted in the overthrow of Gadaffi, took sides in the Egyptian uprising, and made our views well known in Tunisia. We do not seem to understand that some nations do not adapt easily to what we know as “democracy”. Many of them are rife with “tribal” differences and need a very different kind of governance to ours. The western European version of democracy has taken centuries to evolve and yet we expect nations to adapt to it virtually overnight. Almost all of those nations are now extremely unstable yet we continue to get involved and now look like taking part in whatever goes down in Mali.
We should keep clear of these conflicts. Dipping our toes in here and there will not eradicate Islamic fundamentalists. As has been shown, when the going gets tough they simply up sticks and move elsewhere. Another way must be found to ensure the UK’s security