Zionist regime\'s foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman stressed Israel\'s animosity towards Palestine, saying Europeans\' criticism of Israeli settlement construction is meant nothing to Tel Aviv as the regime is not after peace with Palestinians. Israel does not need lessons in democracy from Europe, not even Britain, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said Sunday, an indication Jerusalem is still stinging over a harsh condemnation of its policies last week by three key European powers. The four current members of the UN Security Council - Britain, France, Germany and Portugal - publicly censured Israel last week for continuing to build beyond the Green Line, and called on it to bring \"price tag\" law-breakers to justice. \"We have nothing to apologize for,\" Lieberman said during a speech at the Foreign Ministry to the annual meeting of Israel\'s heads of embassies and consulates abroad. He said Israel does not have anything to be ashamed of in front of the European states. Lieberman, whose ministry last week issued a statement saying that Europe risked losing relevancy if it continued to reflexively condemn Israel and re-interpret various Quartet statements regarding how to restart negotiations with the Palestinians, said in reference to the \"price-tag\" attacks that Israel did not need advice on how to deal with wild weeds breaking the law in Judea and Samaria, or anywhere else in the country. In shockingly arrogant remarks, Lieberman said that the four European countries need to understand that construction in the West Bank was not the obstacle to peace, redisplaying the Zionist regime\'s wild and arrogant nature. The Zionist official rejected peace with the Palestinians and said his regime is not interested in a peace agreement with the Palestinians. Turning to Iran, Lieberman said that some European countries and leaders seemed to feel that they needed to impose sanctions on Iran more to calm down Israel than to stop the Iranian nuclear program.