Iran's attacks on Amazon data centers in UAE, Bahrain signal a new kind of war

2026-03-100:113628fortune.com

As AI becomes critical to both military and civilian use cases, data centers are increasingly seen as strategic targets.

Among the targets Iran has struck in the UAE in the past week were two data centers operated by Amazon’s AWS cloud computing service.Fadel SENNA—AFP/Getty Images

The tech industry often talks about “the cloud” as though it were something abstract and untouchable. But the cloud runs on data centers, those data centers have an address, and that address can be hit by a drone.

Last week, three data centers operated by Amazon Web Services (AWS), two in the United Arab Emirates and one in Bahrain, were struck by Iranian drones or missiles. The attacks forced the facilities offline and led to service outages affecting banking, payments, delivery apps, and enterprise software across the region.

The U.S. military also uses AWS to run some of its workloads, including running Anthropic’s AI model Claude for some intelligence functions, and Iran’s Fars News Agency said on Telegram that the Bahrain facility had been deliberately targeted “to identify the role of these centers in supporting the enemy’s military and intelligence activities.” AWS has declined to comment on the Iranian claim, and it is not known whether the attacks impacted U.S. military computing workloads.Still, the attack is believed to be the first time data centers have been deliberately targeted for air strikes in a conflict. Experts say it almost certainly won’t be the last. Data centers are rapidly emerging as vital strategic assets—and vulnerable targets.

The boundary between commercial cloud computing and military operations has largely vanished. The Pentagon’s Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability and its Joint All-Domain Command and Control networks run on the same commercial infrastructure that serves banks and ride-hailing apps. Meanwhile, several news organizations have reported that the U.S. military used Anthropic’s AI model Claude—which runs on AWS—for intelligence assessments, target identification, and battle simulations during the Iran strikes.

That dual-use reality means that attacks on commercial data centers can have immediate military consequences—and vice versa. “If data centers become critical hubs for transiting military information, we can expect them to be increasingly targeted by both cyber and physical attacks,” Zachary Kallenborn, a PhD researcher at King’s College London, told Fortune.

Kallenborn recently coauthored a study in the journal Risk Analysis on “globally critical infrastructure”—including data centers and subsea cables—that can be important “choke points” for adversaries seeking to disrupt either civilian economies or military operations. He said that in conducting the study he’d held numerous conversations with senior officials around the world and found that “basically no one is thinking about these risks in a systematic way.” 

Data centers have long made some efforts at physical security. But most of these security measures—high fences topped with barbed wire, carefully controlled access, and security cameras—are aimed at preventing espionage or sabotage by a person on the ground, not aerial attacks.

Data centers are sprawling, visible complexes dependent on exposed infrastructure—such as cooling units, diesel generators, and gas turbines—that can be disabled without a direct hit on the server halls themselves. “If you knock out some of the chillers you can take them fully offline,” Sam Winter-Levy, a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told the Financial Times.

Chris McGuire, an AI and technology competition expert who worked on technology policy at the National Security Council under the Biden administration, told the Guardian that data centers built in the Middle East might need to consider measures to guard against aerial attacks. “If you’re actually going to double down the Middle East, maybe it means missile defense on data centers,” he said.

Kallenborn previously told Fortune that as wars are increasingly fought with drones and other robotic systems, it is possible that even local conflicts could become much more regional or even global, as adversaries seek to strike the remote command centers and data center infrastructure needed to control those unmanned systems.

And the problem extends beyond the data centers themselves. Seventeen submarine cables pass through the Red Sea, carrying the majority of data traffic between Europe, Asia, and Africa. With Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz and renewed Houthi threats in the Red Sea, both critical data choke points are now in active conflict zones simultaneously. “Closing both choke points simultaneously would be a globally disruptive event,” Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at network intelligence firm Kentik, told the publication Rest of World. “I’m not aware of that ever happening.”

The strikes on the UAE and Bahrain data centers land at a particularly fraught moment for the Gulf’s ambitions to become a global hub for artificial intelligence. U.S. President Donald Trump’s tour of the region last May generated more than $2 trillion in investment pledges, including the planned Stargate UAE campus in Abu Dhabi—what would be the largest AI facility outside the United States. Amazon committed $5 billion to an AI hub in Saudi Arabia.

For now, the structural advantages that drew tech companies to the Gulf—cheap energy, abundant funding, and a strategic location—remain intact. But Winter-Levy warned that most recent attacks are unlikely to be the last.

Physical attacks on data centers “are only going to become more common moving forward as AI becomes more and more significant,” he told Rest of World. Speaking to the Financial Times, he called the strikes “a harbinger of what’s to come” and warned that such attacks would not be limited to the Middle East.

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Comments

  • By paxys 2026-03-100:572 reply

    > The tech industry often talks about “the cloud” as though it were something abstract and untouchable. But the cloud runs on data centers, those data centers have an address, and that address can be hit by a drone.

    Nominating this as the best opening line I have read in a while.

    • By newsclues 2026-03-100:58

      Information and logistics win wars, and you need lots of compute and storage in a modern war.

    • By journal 2026-03-101:071 reply

      HN could post the IP address of commenters but they wont.

      • By imglorp 2026-03-101:19

        People used to add contact info in their .signature files (!): HTTP, IRC, (etc) and ICBM...

  • By trhway 2026-03-101:092 reply

    Buying an antidrone and even antimissile system like say Pantsir-S1, Skyranger 30 or similar is just few million dollars - peanuts compare to the cost of the datacenter to be protected. Once AMAZN starts doing it for themselves, they will possibly also start air-defense-as-a-service using spare capacity.

    With all the money and assets and the whole value of business, the Big Tech has already started to move into energy, and i think the defense, starting with self-defense, will be among the nearest-future next domains they will move into.

    • By OneMorePerson 2026-03-102:441 reply

      I dunno about defense as a service since those are pretty short range systems you mentioned (how would someone go "buy" excess capacity), but datacenters already cluster around common resources (water, etc.) so group buying some equipment to put in a ring around the datacenter area seems like it would be what they do.

      Yeah the use consumer grade rocket components made SpaceX become viable compared to bloated rocket companies. Short range anti missile systems are not large ordinance, they rely a lot on technology for tracking targeting, and they are not a "weapon" (as in they prevent damage not cause it except inadvertently) so it actually seems like something pretty feasible for a tech company. Build it with consumer grade hardware and you could deploy a ton of them.

      • By etrautmann 2026-03-102:532 reply

        On a mobile platform though…

        Rentable defense is already a thing, but rapidly deployable mini-interceptors like Anduril and many others, or electronic countermeasures could plausibly become much more widespread.

        • By OneMorePerson 2026-03-104:36

          I guess I am splitting hairs but "spare capacity" heavily implies it's a non physical resource or it's able to be used in an instant. Almost like how if you had a global based missile system like a GBI (or not quite global but long range like a THAAD) you could near instantly have someone "bid" to use your missiles in an emergency scenario. Building short range interceptors and selling them or renting them is closer to the model of AWS itself, building a knowledge base hosting your own platform (Amazon.com retail) and then selling that knowledge to others. In this case building anti missile systems to protect data centers and then selling a packaged model to other companies. But it's not "spare capacity", it's selling expertise and helping to fund your own R&D.

        • By trhway 2026-03-103:06

          >electronic countermeasures could plausibly become much more widespread.

          don't forget the amount of power available in the datacenter. You can easily redirect say just mere megawatts to electronic countermeasures (would shut everything around down) or microwave and laser weapons. That for example is just 60KWt https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvQV7Mt02q4

    • By mc3301 2026-03-101:131 reply

      If everyone has an antidrone/antimissile system, then everyone will finally be safe.

      • By trhway 2026-03-101:421 reply

        the previous world order based on sovereign states is quickly coming to end. Emerging world order is based on force, and the large corps have more money than many states. The only thing they are missing is the rights of a sovereign entity. Well in a world order driven by force, the rights you have is the rights that you've obtained by force. I think we'll soon see, by analogy with corporate personhood, some version of corporate statehood.

        • By OneMorePerson 2026-03-104:42

          I don't think it happens quite that distinctly in the world we live in now (technology, etc.). It's not like a big tech company can go attain the same direct power as the East India company way back in the day. It's much more likely that companies continue to gain lobbying and "soft" power that directs the military into doing things. Large corps do have more money than many countries, so if a huge company wants to setup manufacturing or gain benefits in a smaller country they do have outsized power, but its rare that a huge company has more power than their own country from what I know (potentially oil companies are the exception which is why national oil companies seem to have so much weight in so many countries). For example sure the big tech companies are very powerful, but the US military budget per year is still nearly the same size as the largest tech companies market cap. Whereas you are right that a US big tech company has more revenue than say...Guatemala, or Morocco.

  • By paxys 2026-03-100:58

    Striking public infrastructure is the oldest kind of war there is.

    The article does raise an important question though - would an AWS data center be considered a civilian target or military?

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