Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attend the weekly cabinet meeting at his Jerusalem office on Sunday, March 13, 2016. (Gali Tibbon, Pool via AP)

(CNSNews.com) - On a day when terror attacks in Brussels saddened the civilized world, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu told the American Israel Public Affairs Committee that what happened in Europe is part of "one continuous attack on all of us."

"In all these cases, the terrorists have no resolvable grievances," Netanyahu said. "It's not as if we could offer them Brussels or Istanbul or California or even the West Bank. That won't satisfy their grievances, because what they seek is our utter destruction and their total domination. Their basic demand is that we should simply disappear."

Netanyahu, who has long experience battling terrorists who seek the annhilation of Israel, said the only way to defeat them is to "join together and fight them together...with political unity and with moral clarity."

Later in his speech, Netanyahu addressed the continuing efforts by Palestinians leaders to raise a generation of children with "murderous hatred" for Israel.

"Palestinian children are taught to stab Jews. They're taught that the goal of the Palestinian people is not to establish a state on the West Bank, but in all of Israel, in Akko, Haifa, Nazareth, Jaffa."

Netanyahu also criticized the United Nations for maligning Israel:

"At the U.N., Israel, the Middle East's only true Democracy, is slandered like no other country on Earth. At the U.N., Israel is subjected to consistent, systematic discrimination. Only Israel is permanently scheduled for condemnation at the U.N. Human Rights Council. Not Iran, not Syria, not North Korea. Only Israel is hounded by U.N. bodies expressly established to delegitimize its very existence. Only Israel is condemned every year by 20 hostile resolutions in the U.N. General Assembly."

Netanyahu questioned why anyone would think that the U.N. could impose peace terms on Israel, when it is allowing Palestinians to think they can "stab their way to a state."

Netanyahu said the best formula for achieving peace is the two-state solution, "in which a de-militarized Palestinian state finally recognizes the Jewish state."

"Now, I know there's some skepticism about my views on this, so let me state unequivocally -- and here's the acid test. I'm ready to begin such negotiations immediately, without preconditions, anytime, anywhere," Netanyahu said. "That's a fact. But President Abbas is not ready to do so. That's also a fact. There is political will here in Jerusalem. There is no political will there in Ramallah."

Netanyahu noted that Abbas has refused to even talk with him for the past five-and-a-half years.

In a message aimed at Iran, Netanyahu said, "Israel will defend itself mightily against all those who seek to destroy us."