WASHINGTON (Reuters) - US President Donald Trump said on Monday he supported a two-state solution to end the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis, saying he would present his plan for peace in two to three months. Which will be held in November.

Trump explained before starting talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York that he "dreams" of peacefully resolving the conflict after many of his predecessors failed. "I can say in the next two, three or four months," Trump said.

For the first time, Trump explicitly said he supported the two-state solution, which would lead to an independent Palestine. "I think this is the most successful solution, that's what I feel," he said.

"I really think something will happen," Trump said. "It's my dream that I can do it before the end of my first term."

During a meeting with Netanyahu in New York, Trump said: "The American peace plan is going very well, and the conclusion of any peace agreement will take some time." He said he wanted to announce a plan within two or three months and said he believed the Palestinians wanted to return to the negotiating table. "We are with you, we are with Israel 100 percent," he said. "No one supports Israel like you, and we appreciate that."

"Israel will have to do something good for the other side," he said, referring to the Palestinians.

Trump later denounced the UN Security Council as "hostile" to Iran, although it signed an agreement on its nuclear program in 2015.

"In the years following the signing of the agreement, Iran's hostility has increased," Trump said, promising that US sanctions would be fully applied to Tehran at the beginning of November.

"Then the United States will impose new sanctions more severe than ever before to contain the overall bad behavior of Iran."

The US president threatened anyone who does not comply with Iran's sanctions, saying: "You will face dire consequences," pointing out that the Iranian regime is the largest sponsor of terrorism in the world.

Trump opened the meeting of the UN Security Council by criticizing Russia and Iran for supporting the Syrian regime's president Bashar al-Assad in the war in Syria.

"Russia and Iran have allowed the brutality of the Syrian regime," he said at his first meeting.

"Today we are discussing a pressing and urgent issue of combating nuclear weapons," Trump said. The United States has taken bold steps to counter the proliferation of nuclear weapons.

The US president accused China of working against his Republican Party in mid-term elections in November and said Beijing wanted to receive an electoral slap because of its tough trade.

"Unfortunately, we have found that China is trying to interfere in the upcoming election in November 2018 against the interests of my administration," he said. "They do not want me or me to win because I am the first president ever to challenge China on trade."

Trump called on the UN Security Council to fully abide by UN sanctions on North Korea until it disarmed. "I think we will reach an agreement," he said, adding that North Korean leader Kim Yong-un is a man I knew and his ability, and he wants peace and prosperity for North Korea.

"To ensure that this progress continues, we must implement UN Security Council resolutions until nuclear disarmament is achieved," he said, expressing regret that "some countries still violate UN sanctions." US National Security Adviser John Bolton rejected EU plans to set up a special mechanism to circumvent US sanctions on Iranian oil exports, saying the bloc was too talkative.

In a speech at a conference, Bolton said the United States would impose economic sanctions on Iran firmly and firmly. This comes at a time when the Palestinian News and Information Agency (WAFA) quoted President Mahmoud Abbas saying during a meeting at his residence in New York, yesterday, a delegation of members of the Palestinian community in the United States, that «the Palestinian issue now going through the most difficult circumstances, but we will not despair and we will hold even To achieve our goals and our national constants of freedom and independence, and the establishment of our independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital ».

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi urged the United Nations on Monday to find a final settlement of the conflicts in the Arab world, warning that the imbalance in the international organization is questioning its credibility. In his address to the United Nations General Assembly, Sisi reiterated his country's support for political solutions to end conflicts in Syria, Yemen and Libya in order to stop the spread of terrorism and sectarianism.

He said: "Despite the efforts of the international organization in several conflicts, there is no doubt that those efforts are still limited to finding a final settlement of disputes."