
Former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu scaled back Israel's intelligence cooperation with the United States when President Joe Biden took office earlier this year.
Sources in Tel Aviv said that Naftali Bennett's government decided to cancel Netanyahu's instructions and release its information on sensitive issues, including extremism financing.
The sources noted that the Israeli National Security Council held numerous meetings with their US counterpart last week and other secret meetings with US and European officials.
They explained that the intel provided by the Israelis relates to Iran and its affiliates and all terrorist activities in the region.
The meetings also discussed the extremist organizations in Europe and the Americas. Israel provided information about the funding of these organizations. It asserted that the "follow the money" proven has proven its effectiveness in combating these organizations, so Israel is pursuing it through high-tech means and cyber-attacks.
That changed after the election of Biden, who promised to restore the nuclear agreement with Iran, which Israel so vigorously opposed.
Netanyahu even curtailed intelligence sharing with the United States in the spring because he did not trust the Biden administration.
The risk of such dependence became clear in April when Israel set off explosives at Iran's Natanz nuclear plant.
Netanyahu ordered his national security officials to reduce the information they conveyed to Washington about planned operations in Iran, US and Israeli officials said.
On the day of the attack, the Mossad gave the US less than two hours' notice, according to the officials, far too short a time for Washington to assess the operation or ask Israel to call it off.