Trump calls for Gaza war to stop ‘immediately’ in UNGA speech

United States President Donald Trump has told the United Nations General Assembly that Israel’s war on Gaza must stop immediately as he calls the recent recognition of Palestinian statehood by several Western countries a “reward” for Hamas.

“We have to stop the war in Gaza immediately,” Trump told world leaders in New York on Tuesday, adding that he has been “deeply engaged” in trying to secure a ceasefire.

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He reiterated his call for the captives held in Gaza to be returned home. “We have to get it done. We have to negotiate peace. We have to get the hostages back. We want all 20 back,” he said, referring to the 20 of the 48 remaining captives still believed to be alive.

Those who support peace should be united in demanding the release of the captives, he told the General Assembly.

“As if to encourage continued conflict, some of this body is seeking to unilaterally recognise the Palestinian state. The rewards would be too great for Hamas terrorists, for their atrocities,” he said.

In contrast, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said at a meeting on Sunday at the UN aimed at reviving the two-state solution that statehood for Palestinians “is a right, not a reward”.

Sultan Barakat, professor at Hamad Bin Khalifa University in Qatar, said that while Trump called for the war to stop at once, he fell short of mentioning how.

“He knows that the main reason for [the war] sustaining itself at the moment is the fact that he is supporting it,” Barakat told Al Jazeera.

Gaza truce offers

Trump had little criticism for Israel, instead blaming breakdowns in ceasefire negotiations on Hamas. He insisted that Hamas, the Palestinian group that governed Gaza, “has repeatedly rejected reasonable offers to make peace”.

On the other side of the talks, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has continually been accused of stalling the ceasefire negotiations since Israel launched its war on Gaza in October 2023.

Israel targeted Hamas leaders in the Qatari capital, Doha, this month as the Palestinian leaders were meeting there to discuss the latest truce proposal put forth by the US.

The Israeli prime minister broke the last ceasefire with Hamas in mid-March and imposed a total blockade of the Gaza Strip, triggering famine and starvation deaths.

The Palestinian group on Tuesday refuted any responsibility for the failure to reach a deal to end the war in Gaza. “We have never been an obstacle to reaching an agreement,” it said in a statement.

“The US administration, the mediators and the world know that Netanyahu is the sole obstructionist in all attempts to reach an agreement.”

Hamas has said it is ready for a truce that will lead to the release of captives and Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and a withdrawal of the Israeli army from Gaza, but Netanyahu has refused to commit to a full withdrawal. This month, Netanyahu decided to seize Gaza City, launching a ground invasion that has killed hundreds of Palestinians and displaced thousands.

More than 65,000 Palestinians have been killed since Israel launched its war. The US has been heavily criticised for continuing to arm Israel in a war that a UN commission described as amounting to genocide.

Trump also dedicated some of his speech to the General Assembly to Iran, describing Tehran as the “world’s number one sponsor of terror”. He promised Iran would “never possess a nuclear weapon”.

“Three months ago in Operation Midnight Hammer, seven American B-2 bombers dropped 30,000lb [13,600kg] each bombs on Iran’s key nuclear facilities, totally obliterating everything. No other country on Earth could have done what we did,” Trump said.

While the US president claimed the operation demolished Iran’s nuclear enrichment capacity, a US defence assessment later suggested the strike only delayed Iran’s nuclear progress by several months.

‘Nobel Peace Prize’

The US president delivered his remarks minutes after Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva had spoken, denouncing authoritarianism, environmental destruction and inequality, a contrast in tone to Trump’s focus on unilateral strength, nationalism and grievances.

Trump began his speech by taking aim at the teleprompter and a broken elevator he said he encountered at the UN headquarters before moving on to paint his administration as overseeing an economic success story in the US.

At several points, Trump returned to his record on foreign policy, claiming to have brought an end to “seven different wars” and suggesting his achievements warranted the Nobel Peace Prize. “Everyone says I should get a Nobel Peace Prize for these achievements,” he said before adding that he did not care about awards, only “saving lives”.

Taking a dig at the UN, Trump said the world body was not coming close to living up to its potential. “I had to end wars instead of the United Nations,” he said.

As the Ukraine conflict rumbles on, Trump argued the war would “never have started if I was president”. He described his relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin as “a good one” but said Moscow’s invasion is “not making Russia look good”.

He criticised Europe for continuing to buy Russian oil and gas despite sanctions, calling the practice “embarrassing”, and he singled out China and India as “primary funders” of Russia’s war effort.

“Everyone thought Russia would win in three days, but it didn’t,” Trump said while urging European Union nations to impose tariffs on Moscow.

Attacks on immigration and the UN

As the UN grapples with what experts describe as one of the most volatile periods in its 80-year history, Trump used the platform to attack the institution itself, accusing the body of “funding an assault on Western countries and their borders”. He claimed the organisation was helping “illegal aliens” enter the US by providing food, shelter, transportation and “debit cards”.

The International Organization for Migration, a UN agency, does provide assistance through disbursement cards and transport programmes but in coordination with governments – not to facilitate irregular border crossings.

On Europe, Trump warned of what he called an “invasion” of immigrants and took aim at London Mayor Sadiq Khan, falsely claiming the Muslim politician wants to impose Islamic law.

The US president characterised migration and renewable energy as the biggest threat to the “free world”. He said some countries are “going to hell” over their border policies while calling climate change “the greatest con job”.

“In closing, I just want to repeat that immigration and the high cost of so-called green renewable energy is destroying a large part of the free world and a large part of our planet,” he said.

He also renewed attacks on climate policies and accused Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro of aiding drug smuggling.

Israel shuts crossing that connects occupied West Bank to Jordan

Palestinian authorities claim that Israel has mandated the King Hussein Bridge’s indefinite closure, which is the only means of transportation for people and goods between Jordan and the occupied West Bank.

The bridge crossing will be closed until further notice, according to the Palestinian General Authority for Borders and Crossings on Tuesday. The crossing was also made public by the Jordanian Public Security Directorate, who stated that it would be closed “until further notice” for both passenger and cargo traffic.

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The crossing was officially opened on Sunday after it had been temporarily closed following a deadly attack, making it essentially the only point for Palestinians to leave the West Bank.

At the Israeli-controlled crossing last week, a Jordanian national driving a humanitarian aid truck fatally wounded two Israeli soldiers. The Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s armed wing, blasted for the shooting.

Countermeasure to Palestinian statehood, in other words.

There are many questions up in the air about why Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has decided to completely close the border, according to Al Jazeera’s Hamdah Sahut, a journalist from Amman, in Jordan.

Sahut, who is reporting from Amman because Israel’s government has forbid Al Jazeera from reporting inside Israel and the West Bank, said that “some within Israeli media view it as one of the first countermeasures Israel is taking as a result of many countries in the international community recognising a Palestinian state.

The Palestinians from the West Bank’s only international gateway does not require entering Israel, which has occupied the area since 1967, at Karama, which is known as Karama on the Palestinian side.

As Israeli forces launched a collective punishment campaign that required the suspects’ homes to be destroyed in the West Bank and their neighbors’ work permits to be revoked, Palestinians were on edge last week as the attack left them on edge.

In addition to imposing a curfew in the West Bank city of Tulkarem a week before the bridge attack, Israeli forces raided the area and detained more than 100 Palestinians.

Palestinians’ daily movements are harrowing and humiliating because they must navigate hundreds of checkpoints and are frequently beaten by Israeli soldiers while traveling in the West Bank, according to campaigners.

Israel has launched a crackdown on the West Bank, killing more than 1, 000 Palestinians there, arresting thousands, and destroying hundreds of homes and civic infrastructure as the world has focused on Israel’s genocidal war against Gaza in the past two years. Israeli military and settler violence was at its highest level in years even before the Hamas-led Palestinian group’s attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

Despite international demands for a Palestinian state as part of a two-state solution, Netanyahu and members of his cabinet have pledged to annex the West Bank.

However, when Netanyahu announced a new settlement expansion on Palestinian land, he declared last week that there would “no Palestinian state.” Achieving a sovereign Palestinian state is a major challenge due to settlements, which are against international law.

France joined four other nations on Monday to declare Palestinian statehood. A day earlier, Australia, Canada, Portugal, Portugal, and the United Kingdom formally recognized Palestine.

Syrian President al-Sharaa sits down with US general who arrested him

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and retired four-star US general David Petraeus have acknowledged the peculiarity of the situation taking to the stage at a political forum in New York City for an interview.

Since January, Al-Sharaa has been in office since he overthrew Bashar al-Assad and ended his family’s 50-year rule of Syria in a fierce military offensive.

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Petraeus commanded US forces during their invasion of Iraq, which in turn led to the US’s capture and imprisonment of al-Sharaa in 2006 and 2011. Petraeus later held the position of CIA director.

Al-Sharaa founded the al-Nusra Front in Syria in 2012 in response to his release. It cut ties with al-Qaeda four years later. Al-Sharaa led the formation of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which was formed a year later when al-Nusra and other organizations merged.

HTS was labeled a “terrorist organization” by the US in 2018, citing past ties to al-Qaeda, which the US revoked in July as Washington relaxed its policy toward post-Assad Syria.

Only in late December, the US lifted al-Sharaa’s head, which had been a $10 million bounty.

timing and venue significance

Al-Sharaa, the first head of state from Syria in almost six decades, made the trip to New York on Sunday to take part in the UN General Assembly.

The leader addressed events on the sidelines of the General Assembly on Monday and the president and his large delegation met, including with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

On the UN General Assembly’s September 22, 2025, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, left, greets US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

He then took part in the 2025 Concordia Annual Summit, a global affairs forum that brings together world leaders, business executives, and NGO figures to promote public-private partnerships and dialogue alongside Petraeus.

More than 3, 600 people from 112 nations and nine heads of state were among Concordia’s more than 300 speakers last year, according to Concordia’s report from last year. Antonio Guterres, the head of US business, Warren Buffett, and Joe Biden, the former US president, are among the potential participants.

Why does Petraeus support al-Sharaa?

The former US general praised al-Sharaa, who has set an October deadline for parliamentary elections in Syria, by not only acknowledging the odd pairing but also using it.

According to Petraeus, his transition from an insurgent leader to head of state has been one of the most dramatic political transitions in recent Middle Eastern history.

He later inquired about the Syrian leader’s health and asked if he was getting enough sleep later in the interview. According to Petraeus, al-Sharaa has “many fans” and is one of them.

When asked about their history, al-Sharaa said, “We used to be in combat, but now we move on to discourse,” adding that those who have experienced war are aware of the value of peace.

The Syrian president said, “We cannot judge the past based on the laws of today, and we cannot judge the world based on the laws of today.”

Al-Sharaa, who referred to his time as a commander of al-Qaeda, said that “perhaps there were mistakes” before, but what’s important right now is preventing instability for the Syrian people and the region.

“We are sitting here among allies and friends, and our commitment to that line is what brought us here today in [New York].

Al-Sharaa claimed that he thought his cause was “noble” and merited support.

He claimed that the al-Assad regime had caused chaos in Syria this year and that “all parties made mistakes, including some of the government,” during the violence.

He continued, noting that all violators would be prosecuted by a newly formed council.

He claimed that the new government’s support for economic growth and Syria’s unification are now top priorities.

In this context, he once more requested that the US Congress revoke the 2019 Caesar Syria Civil Protection Act, which outlaws Syria.

The president reiterated his commitment to safeguarding Syria’s minority populations, including the northern Kurdish population, whose constitutional rights must be upheld. He added that the government and its army must be the only entity with guns and that Kurdish armed forces must not operate outside of the state’s purview.

The Syrian leader also mentioned Israel, citing that it has attacked Syria more than 1, 000 times since al-Assad’s fall and continues to occupy the Golan Heights.

Trump proposes new H-1B visa process prioritising highly skilled workers

According to a Federal Register notice, the White House has proposed reshaping the H-1B visa selection process to favor more skilled and well-paid workers.

A $100, 000 visa fee was announced in a White House proclamation on Friday that was followed by the new proposal, which was released on Tuesday.

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If the new procedure is finalized, employers who pay high wages would receive more weight in applications for visas if annual requests for the visas exceed the 85, 000-per-year cap, according to the notice. According to the statement, the action seeks to better shield US workers from unfair wage competition from foreigners.

After taking office in January, Donald Trump launched a comprehensive immigration crackdown, including a campaign to force mass deportations and attempting to halt undocumented immigrant children’s citizenship. His administration has recently put more emphasis on the H-1B program, which is well-known among technology companies and foreign outsourcing firms for hiring skilled foreign workers.

The H-1B visa program will require companies to pay $100, 000 annually, according to the administration’s announcement on Friday. Large tech companies issued a warning to visa holders to stay in the country or quickly return, causing a chaotic shuffle to return. Later, the White House made it clear that the fee would only apply to new visas.

Tech company stocks on Wall Street have not effectively responded to the looming changes. Over the past five days, shares of Amazon, which sponsors the most H-1B visas of any company, have fallen by almost 5%.

The proposed regulation, which was made public on Tuesday, would alter the lottery system’s current system to allow applicants to apply for visas if demand exceeds supply in a given year, creating wage levels that give candidates with higher-paying positions a better chance of being chosen.

It can take months or even years to complete a regulation. Prior to the registration period in March, according to the notice, the new regulations might be in place for the lottery in 2026.

According to the notice, the total wages for H-1B employees was projected to increase to $ 502 million starting on October 1 for the fiscal year 2026, citing estimates from the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) estimates.

Those wages would increase by $1bn in fiscal 2027, $1.5bn in fiscal 2028 and $2bn in fiscal 2029-2035, it said.

According to DHS, labor-loss would be a significant economic repercussion for an estimated 5,200 small businesses that currently receive H-1B visas.

Starting on Wednesday, the notice stated that US Citizenship and Immigration Services will provide the public with 30 days to comment.

Slowing the employment market

A new AP-NORC poll found that about six in ten US adults believe that immigrants’ entry into the workforce will have a significant impact, up from four in ten in March 2024, suggesting that the heightened requirements were suggested.

According to the poll, 51% of US adults believe that skilled laborers gain a “major” benefit from legal immigration.

The US economy is experiencing slow job growth as a result of the new proposal.

According to the most recent employment report from the Department of Labor, the economy added only 22, 000 jobs in August.