Amazon’s cloud services division has experienced another assault in the Middle Eastern theater. On Wednesday, Iranian forces targeted an AWS data center in Bahrain, leading to temporary service interruptions.
This represents the second attack on Amazon’s Bahrain infrastructure. Previously during the ongoing hostilities, Iranian forces struck two AWS facilities in the United Arab Emirates along with another commercial data center in Bahrain.
Bahrain’s interior ministry verified that Civil Defence personnel responded to a blaze at the location following the Iranian offensive. Officials indicated they were implementing security protocols at the site.
Amazon.com, Inc., AMZN
Prior to this recent assault, Amazon had already issued warnings that its AWS infrastructure in Bahrain faced disruption due to “drone activity” in the vicinity.
The attacks have triggered widespread outages affecting applications and digital platforms throughout the UAE and surrounding territories. Financial institutions and governmental organizations dependent on AWS systems experienced service interruptions.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps declared the attacks were directed at data facilities that provide support for “the adversary’s” military and intelligence functions.
On March 31, Iranian authorities formally classified 18 American technology enterprises as valid military targets. This designation encompasses Amazon, Microsoft, Nvidia, Google, Apple, Meta, HP, Tesla, Oracle, Boeing, Cisco, and IBM.
The April 1 assault on Amazon’s Bahrain operation represented the first confirmed direct attack on a specifically named U.S. technology company following that declaration.
Iran’s focus on data center infrastructure demonstrates a comprehensive tactical approach. Reports indicate that U.S. military personnel have utilized artificial intelligence platforms, including Anthropic’s Claude system, for analytical and operational purposes. AWS cloud infrastructure allegedly hosts classified government information and applications.
The reliance of U.S. military capabilities on AI systems has transformed cloud computing facilities into a novel battlefield dimension in the conflict.
American technology corporations have pursued aggressive expansion strategies in the Middle East over recent years. Economical energy prices and abundant real estate made the region appealing for constructing AI infrastructure.
Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and other industry leaders have committed substantial capital to major data center developments throughout Gulf nations. This expansion strategy has now positioned them as physical targets within an active combat zone.
Wall Street analysts maintain a consensus Strong Buy rating on Amazon’s stock, with 43 analysts issuing opinions—40 Buy ratings and three Hold ratings over the past three months. The average analyst price target reaches $279.88, suggesting approximately 33% potential upside from present trading levels.
The Bahrain incident represents the latest verified attack on American technology infrastructure in the Middle Eastern region.
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