The leaked information includes names, identification numbers, phone numbers and addresses.

Iran and other foreign intelligence agencies may already have access to the private cellphone numbers and other information of top Israeli intelligence officials, after a “disastrous” Likud party cyber error, a former cyber official of the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) told The Jerusalem Post on Monday.

Harel Menashri, a founder of the Shin Bet’s cyber department, said that the incident was, “an embarrassment in terms of how bad it is. The real personal information of every citizen above the age of 18” has been exposed.

Menashri, currently the Head of Cyber at the Holon Institute of Technology, said that, “many parties, like foreign intelligence agencies, may have access to top officials of the Likud Party, to the head of the Shin Bet, the head of the Mossad and others. There are also many private companies who will also want the information.”

Sunday night, Haaretz reported that the personal information of 6,453,254 Israelis was leaked, after the Likud Party uploaded the entire Israeli national voter registry to an application.

The leaked information includes names, identification numbers, phone numbers and addresses.

Political parties in Israel receive the information of Israeli voters before the elections, must protect their privacy and cannot copy, erase or transfer the registry.

The voter registry was uploaded to the Elector application which the Likud Party uses on Election Day. A breach in the application allowed for the leaking of the registry, which could then be downloaded on a computer.