No-one can seriously try and defend either William Hague's handling of this incident, or the backlash that will result from it.
I believe Mr Hague to be a man of honour, and i hope he will hold up his hands in the House, and admit that he and his office got this badly wrong.
As experienced army personal have advised through the media, the best way to approach a revolutionary army in a lawless area like Lybia is to approach trusted commanders on the ground, and negotiate a cladestine meeting. Arriving by helecoper is hardly in the spirit of secrecy, and arriving unannounced with arms is likely to result n a response of the 'shoot first, ask questions afterwards ...' variety.
Quite how Mr Hague would feel if the rebels had parachuted into Whitehall for a chinwag about things is a conversation no doubt being conduted behind closed doors as I write ...