@japa_anjo045:

Japa Anjo
Japa Anjo
Open In TikTok:
Region: BR
Sunday 15 February 2026 01:51:55 GMT
5422
372
7
6

Music

Download

Comments

pedromiranda449760
pedromiranda449760 :
linda 💞💞💞
2026-02-15 01:54:56
2
maurosantosmaurom
Mauro Santos Mauro Maurosantos :
nossa que delicia 😋🤤🤤😍
2026-02-15 14:00:47
2
user2044047812605
Sebastião Alves :
❤️
2026-02-16 00:22:14
1
gladson.dantas.br
Gladson Dantas brito :
😍😍😍
2026-02-16 02:40:53
1
josivan.carneiro7
Josivan Carneiro :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-02-15 04:28:57
1
user765939600
Antônio Carlos :
boa noite minha rainha vc está linda 💕😘😘
2026-02-15 01:53:30
1
To see more videos from user @japa_anjo045, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Andreas Krieg, an associate professor at King’s College London, says that the war Donald Trump and Israel waged against Iran has shattered the Gulf monarchies’ central security assumption, that the United States would keep them safe. Krieg says that American bases across the Gulf did not shield regional states from a war they never chose. Instead, they made them targets. Iran could not easily reach Tel Aviv or Washington, so it struck softer targets within range, and the Gulf absorbed the blows. The protector had become “the source of the threat”. He says Trump proved he could start a war, but not end one. His impatience and shifting between the Israel lobby and the Gulf lobby left him unable to deliver the patient bargaining needed for a settlement. Once again, the Gulf was left to repair what others had broken. Krieg says that the crisis forced Gulf states to act for themselves. Qatar became a key diplomatic hinge between Washington and Tehran, while Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Pakistan and Oman helped keep diplomacy alive. Even the UAE’s late turn towards pragmatism meant the Gulf’s major powers were no longer running rival foreign policies. For Krieg, the lesson is that the Gulf is one security system. Its economies, waterways and people are too closely connected for one state to remain safe while another burns. Deterrence alone will not work with Iran, he argues. It must be paired with engagement, trade and interdependence. He concludes that the Gulf can either continue waiting for Washington, Tehran and Tel Aviv to decide its fate, or act collectively to shape the regional order around it.
Andreas Krieg, an associate professor at King’s College London, says that the war Donald Trump and Israel waged against Iran has shattered the Gulf monarchies’ central security assumption, that the United States would keep them safe. Krieg says that American bases across the Gulf did not shield regional states from a war they never chose. Instead, they made them targets. Iran could not easily reach Tel Aviv or Washington, so it struck softer targets within range, and the Gulf absorbed the blows. The protector had become “the source of the threat”. He says Trump proved he could start a war, but not end one. His impatience and shifting between the Israel lobby and the Gulf lobby left him unable to deliver the patient bargaining needed for a settlement. Once again, the Gulf was left to repair what others had broken. Krieg says that the crisis forced Gulf states to act for themselves. Qatar became a key diplomatic hinge between Washington and Tehran, while Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Pakistan and Oman helped keep diplomacy alive. Even the UAE’s late turn towards pragmatism meant the Gulf’s major powers were no longer running rival foreign policies. For Krieg, the lesson is that the Gulf is one security system. Its economies, waterways and people are too closely connected for one state to remain safe while another burns. Deterrence alone will not work with Iran, he argues. It must be paired with engagement, trade and interdependence. He concludes that the Gulf can either continue waiting for Washington, Tehran and Tel Aviv to decide its fate, or act collectively to shape the regional order around it.

About