
Summary Bullets:
• Military strikes by Iran damaged AWS data centers in the UAE and Bahrain, highlighting vulnerability of the region’s data centers.
• Foreign investors, local tech decision makers, and insurance firms are now revisiting the calculus of risk in the data center boom.
Earlier this week, AWS data centers – two Availability Zones (AZ) in the UAE and another in Bahrain, all part of the AWS ME-Central-1 Region – suffered physical damage in escalatory strikes by Iran. The attacks disrupted 73 core services in the Bahrain AZ; at the time of writing, as per information shared by the AWS Health Dashboard, AWS stated that only 33 services were resolved. In the UAE, of the 112 impacted AWS services, only three have been resolved while others still face severe disruption or degradation. AWS strongly advised customers to enact disaster recovery plans and migrate workloads to unaffected AWS Regions in Europe, APAC, and the US.
The immediate impact of the tech outages has been on regional banking platforms (e.g., ADCB, Emirates NBD), consumer apps (e.g., Careem), enterprise software platforms (e.g., Snowflake), payment apps (e.g., Alaa, Hubpay), and government services were affected. More importantly, the incidents have undermined confidence in the long-term viability of large-scale US-led physical infrastructure investments. In some ways, data centers are the new oilfields, in that they are targets for hostile actors.
The recent events come on the back of the Gulf states – particularly the UAE and Saudi Arabia – courting large-scale AI data center investments from American vendors. Governments have emphasized controlled tech import regimes, and supply-chain integrity that mitigated the risk of proprietary American tech being leaked to China or Russia. Last year, the GCC nations made vast commitments to ambitious AI and data center projects exceeding $100 billion. Cybersecurity has been a hot topic over the past few years. But what was relegated to the background here – until now – was the physical integrity of GCC’s data center infrastructure from kinetic threats, which have suddenly sprung up as a result of the latest tensions. Whatever the short-, medium-, and long-term outcomes, this dynamic adds a new dimension of concern to the tech leadership ambitions of the GCC nations.
For cloud data centers, there will be an architectural and operational rethink by the American hyperscalers. Reliance on multiple AZs within the same region is evidently insufficient. Resilient systems will demand geo-agnostic, intercontinental diversity, with cloud providers being able to demonstrate broad critical workload distribution to defend against region-level attacks. The impact of current events means operational and business continuity planning will shift from best practice to necessity, underpinned by redress for reputational damage or economic failure. Still, sectors like finance and healthcare and single-region deployment that require complete sovereignty will be exposed to greater risk and regulators will be thinking hard on how best to mitigate vulnerabilities.
For the promised mega AI data centers that are at the beginning of their build outs in Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Qatar, investors will most probably be looking carefully at the commitment to the scale of investments that were promised in 2025. The region still possesses a lower tax burden, lower energy costs, vast greenfield opportunities, and governments willing to make things happen. However, it is expected that any new data centers will require physical hardening through blast shielding or by potentially moving underground. They will also drive up OPEX with higher insurance costs. All of this has the potential to shrink the ambitious scale of the build outs. To assist, regional governments are likely to establish formal protection procedures for digital infrastructure hosted in their borders in recognition of AI and cloud data centers as critical national assets.







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