What to Expect, and What Not to, at the UN Meeting on an Israel-Palestinian Two-State Solution
- UN members began a two-day conference on July 28, 2025, in New York to promote a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine, co-chaired by France and Saudi Arabia.
- The conference was postponed from June due to a 12-day Israel-Iran conflict and occurs despite Israel and the US boycotting it, calling it 'a gift to Hamas'.
- The meeting focuses on recognizing a Palestinian state, reforming the Palestinian Authority, disarming Hamas, excluding it from governance, and normalization by Arab states without new deals expected.
- French President Macron plans to formally recognize Palestine in September, saying this move will 'breathe new life' into the conference where over 100 countries will address Gaza's humanitarian crisis.
- The conference takes place amid a 22-month war that has killed nearly 60,000 Palestinians, while Hamas rejects ceasefires and international pressure mounts to end the conflict and address humanitarian needs.
60 Articles
60 Articles
United Nations, 28 Jul (EFE).- The Permanent Representative of Mexico to the UN, Héctor Vasconcelos, pleaded this Monday in the General Assembly for Israeli and Palestinian school programs that emphasize the points in common between the two cultures. On the first day of the International Conference for the Solution of the Two States in the Middle East (one Israeli and one Palestinian), Mexico, together with Qatar, Canada, Turkey, Ireland, Brazil…
UN gathers to advance two-state solution to Israel-Palestine conflict
Fired by France's imminent recognition of Palestinian statehood, UN members begin a two-day conference Monday in New York to breathe life into the push for a two-state solution. However, neither Israel nor the US are expected to attend.

What to expect, and what not to, at the UN meeting on an Israel-Palestinian two-state solution
The U.N. General Assembly has brought high-level officials together to promote a two-state solution to the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
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