* UK PM Johnson: Don't expect Brexit breakthrough in NY
* Barnier casts doubt on chances of breaking Brexit logjam
* UK "whole and entire" must be able to break away - PM
* Supreme Court to rule at 0930 GMT on Tuesday
* Labour Party to vote on Brexit
By Kylie MacLellan and Thomas Escritt
NEW YORK/BERLIN, Sept 23 (Reuters) - The European Union's Brexit negotiator said on Monday it was difficult to see a way to break the Brexit impasse as British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's demand to drop an insurance policy for the Irish border was unacceptable.
More than three years after the United Kingdom voted by 52%-48% in a referendum to leave the European Union, the future of Brexit remains uncertain, with options ranging from a turbulent no-deal exit to abandoning the entire endeavour.
Hopes of an deal to ease the transition were stoked when Johnson said the shape of an accord was emerging and European Commission President Juncker said an agreement was possible.
But EU negotiator Michel Barnier cast doubt on the likelihood of a deal and reaffirmed that the bloc could not agree to London's demand to remove the Irish "backstop", a policy to prevent a return of border controls on the island of Ireland - without a serious alternative.
"I am sure you understand this is unacceptable," Barnier said during a news conference in Berlin alongside German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas.
EU sources said no proper alternative for the border between Northern Ireland, a British province, and Ireland that ensures the integrity of the EU single market and customs union has been proposed yet by London, so no breakthrough is on the cards.
In a quip about British talk of virtual checks on the border, Barnier said: "I don't know how to inspect a cow with virtual methods."
"Based on current UK thinking, it is difficult to see how we can arrive at a legally operative solution which fulfils all the objectives of the backstop. It is in a very sensitive and difficult phase," he said.
Johnson has vowed to take Britain out of the EU by the current deadline of Oct. 31, with or without a transition deal.
With the outcome of the marathon Brexit process still mired in doubt, the United Kingdom Supreme Court will rule on Tuesday whether Johnson's Aug. 28 decision to suspend parliament was unlawful.
BREXIT IN PLAY?
If its 11 justices rule against the government at 10:30 a.m. (0930 GMT) on Tuesday, Johnson could be forced to recall parliament - a step that widens the scope for lawmakers to block his "do-or-die" Brexit plans, which they fear could see Britain crashing out of the EU without a deal.