What will you not see at the UN General Assembly? What to expect?

This week’s high level of the UN General Assembly will bring more than 140 world leaders to New York, as they aim to promote global peace and safety, despite the deepening of disagreements on how to achieve it. From Tuesday, nearly 90 presidents, 43 first ministers and one crown prince are expected to speak to the UN, setting out their visions for solving continued conflicts in Europe and the Middle East, tackling the rising climate crisis and confronting the risks associated with the rapid progress of artificial intelligence. The internal financial unrest the United Nations has in the week -long summit is the 80th anniversary of the Foundation, which celebrated from the Ruin of World War II. Questions about the relevance and efficiency of the UN have been tightened from both supporters and critics. Recent US cuts to foreign aid and the re -evaluation of humanitarian contributions by other countries have forced a reckoning for the world body. Here are five things to look at this week: The outcome of the two-state solution conference this week has kicked off with a prominent meeting led by France and Saudi Arabia, which aims to raise international support for a two-state solution for Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The long conference wrapped late Monday with several countries – among them France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Malta and Monaco – who announced or confirmed their recognition to a Palestinian state. This follows similar statements made by the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and Portugal the day before. Germany, Italy and Japan participated in the conference, but did not recognize such a state. The US and Israel boycotted the opportunity, saying that the international effort was rewarded after a Palestinian state of Hamas and made it more difficult to reach an agreement to stop the war and return the remaining hostages. The developments came when several US allies – including Canada and the United Kingdom – acknowledged an independent Palestinian state over the weekend. However, the meeting and the growing international support for Palestinian state hijacking are expected to have a minimal immediate effect on the ground, where Israel continues its large -scale military offensive in Gaza and expands the settlements in the occupied West Bank. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a long -standing opponent of Palestinian state hijacking, warned in response to additional unilateral measures. Nevertheless, supporters of the recognition effort – including senior UN officials – are steadfast, arguing that the recognition of Palestinian state hijacking is essential at this critical time in the conflict. While the US isolates, other world forces will reduce the climate pawn over 110 world leaders at a special UN climate summit on Wednesday, designed to strengthen nations to strengthen their requirement, but already late plans to wean themselves from coal, oil and natural gas that cause climate change. Dozens of business leaders are in New York networks in various conferences aimed at greener and cleaner energy. “Don’t believe that the Doomsters and the Glooms and the Naysayers say that the world is somehow moving away from climate action, clean energy,” UK chief Ed Millibrand said. The nations of the world were all supposed to come up with new five-year plans by February to combat carbon emissions, which led to the Brazil negotiations. But only 47 of the 195 countries – responsible for less than a quarter of the global emissions – did so. UN officials said they should really be submitted by the end of this month so that experts can calculate how the world is doing in its efforts to reduce emissions. The world’s largest emitter, China and another top pollinator, the European Union, are expected to announce their plans or rough sketches of their plans this week. The United Nations session is designed this week to enchant countries to do more. Trump returns to the UN after withdrawing us from world stage president Donald Trump will be the second leader who speaks when the General Assembly kicks off his debate Tuesday morning. Trump will return to the UN for the first time since his second term in January. His speech will be one of the most expected, as America’s allies and adversaries are waiting to see what the president will say about ongoing attempts to end the wars in Gaza and Ukraine. UN officials will breathe to see if more financing cuts of the US – their biggest donor – are on the horizon after Trump and his allies spent the first few months in the office to reduce international aid spending. He issued a first-day executive order withdrawing the US from the UN World Health Organization (WHO). This was followed by the termination of US Participation in the UN Human Rights Board, and a review of the US membership of hundreds of intergovernmental organizations aimed at determining whether they are in line with the priorities of its “America First” agenda. “There is great hope for it, but it is not well managed, to be honest,” Trump told reporters last week when he prepared for his speech to the General Assembly. The two other keynote speakers come from the Middle East, where different conflicts have come to a high moment over the past few years in Syria and Iran’s presidents. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian will appear on the UN stage on Wednesday at a moment of great scope for his country, as a 30-day window to stop the reopening of sanctions on Tehran, closes at the end of this week. The clock began when France, Germany and the United Kingdom declared on August 28 that Iran did not meet the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. It also comes after a series of diplomatic talks in the last ditch to prevent UN sanctions from breaking down in recent days, with European leaders accusing Iran of not being serious about the circumstances. Pezeshkian and his foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, have the next few days to meet with their European News York counterparts to come to a resolution that would avoid the series of financial fines that would push the already crippling Iranian economy into further disorder. A few hours later, Iran’s once strategic ally, Syria, will debut its new leader, the first head of state to represent the war -torn country in the UN in nearly six decades. Ahmad Al-Sharaa will officially represent the new Syria on the world scene for the first time since the then President Bashar Assad in December by a lightning-upright offensive led by Al-Sharaa. Al-Sharaa spent nine months recovering ties with Arab countries and the West, where officials were initially careful of his past with the Al-Qaida militant group. His speech on Wednesday will also be closely watched by the US, who previously led Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, the rebel group of Al-Sharaa, as a terror group. All the meetings you won’t see will probably take place some of the most attractive and influential diplomacy held at the UN General Assembly at the Embassy Donists and at private meals and drinks at some of Manhattan’s most exclusive restaurants and clubs. The week at high level, which is noted by some UN viewers as the World Cup of Diplomacy, is packed with official and unofficial events between heads of state and government, where complicated trade transactions, sensitive peace negotiations and even normalization efforts between allies and opponents can see breakthroughs. Officials mention that more than 1,600 bilateral meetings are scheduled to take place within the vast UN campus that oversees the East River. (With inputs of AP)