U.S. Tech
Giants Flocked to the Persian Gulf. Now They Are Targets.
Amazon,
Google and others struck deals in the Persian Gulf to foot the bill for A.I.
development. Iran has now threatened attacks against the companies’
infrastructure in the region.
Adam
Satariano Paul Mozur
By Adam
Satariano and Paul Mozur
March 13,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/13/technology/amazon-google-persian-gulf-war.html
In 2019,
Amazon built its first data center in the Persian Gulf in Bahrain. Three years
later, it expanded to the United Arab Emirates. In 2024, it began more than $10
billion in new projects across Saudi Arabia.
The moves
helped Amazon stake a claim to one of the world’s fastest growing regions,
where deep-pocketed governments and investors wanted in on the digital economy
and artificial intelligence race.
“We look
forward to helping drive innovation and talent development across the kingdom,”
Andy Jassy, Amazon’s chief executive, said in a visit to Saudi Arabia last year
with President Trump and other tech executives.
But Mr.
Jassy’s plans were thrown into chaos on March 1 when Iranian drones damaged
Amazon’s data center in Bahrain and struck two others in the U.A.E. Many
customers who relied on the data centers for computing power remain in limbo.
American
tech companies are facing a new reality in the Persian Gulf two weeks into the
U.S.-Israeli war against Iran. The region — seen as a safe haven for
investment, cheap energy and hands-off regulation — became a hub for building
the data centers needed to create and deliver A.I. software. Google, Microsoft,
OpenAI and other American firms flocked to the area for its growing economies
and its convenient online transmission links to Africa and Europe.
Across
the Middle East, total spending on consumer and business technology reached an
estimated $65 billion last year, up from $36 billion in 2020, according to the
research firm IDC. Spending on technology for data centers and cloud services
rose 75 percent last year to $895 million.
Yet as
the war drags on, the tech giants’ bets in the region look increasingly
vulnerable.
This
week, Iran threatened wider attacks against “enemy technology infrastructure”
belonging to seven U.S. tech firms — Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Palantir,
Nvidia, I.B.M. and Oracle. On Thursday, Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s new supreme
leader, raised further concerns with a vague warning that the country would be
“opening other fronts where the enemy has little experience.”
In the
past couple of weeks, the tech industry has learned lessons that oil producers
and global banks have struggled to navigate for decades, with billions of
dollars of A.I. investment thrown into question.
“The
energy sector is much more experienced in dealing with traditional geopolitical
risks than the tech sector,” said Steffen Hertog, a professor at the London
School of Economics and Political Science, who is an expert on the Gulf
economies. “Most non-energy investors in the Gulf underpriced risk before the
current war, including U.S. tech companies.”
After
Amazon’s data centers were damaged by Iranian drones, many businesses in the
region lost access to their networks.
“They got
knocked out,” said Simon Williams, a former Amazon employee who is now an
executive at the A.I. company Atelic AI in Dubai. “We lost all our access to
our servers. It’s had a major impact on our business.”
Mr.
Williams is optimistic the region will remain a hub for tech investment. Yet he
has not had any luck reaching Amazon representatives to regain access to key
materials stored on the company’s cloud.
“It’s
been a black box,” he said. “They didn’t have the best disaster recovery
system.”
Amazon
suggested customers in the Middle East move workloads to data centers in other
regions. In a statement, the company said it was “adjusting operations in
response to the evolving situation, including temporary pauses where
necessary.”
Google
said it was monitoring the situation and that “our focus is on the safety and
well-being of our employees in the region.” Microsoft declined to comment.
Dave
Komendat, Boeing’s former top security officer, said data centers make
attractive targets in a conflict because they are a new form of critical
infrastructure. After Amazon’s data centers were hit, companies will give
greater consideration to security risks before building, he said.
“This is
a low-frequency, high-impact event,” said Mr. Komendat, now a partner at
Corporate Security Advisors, a security consulting firm. “It may not happen
again or it may happen 10 more times.”
The
issues illustrate the centrality of American tech giants to geopolitical
clashes, pushing key tech capabilities into areas that could turn them into
choke points.
Widening
spillover effects of the Iran war are expected to hit the tech industry. That
includes disrupted supply chains, soaring prices for natural gas needed to
power data centers, and rising costs for commodities like plastic and aluminum
that are essential for making electronic components.
“The real
weapon is not the drone; it is the insurance cancellation, the rerouted tanker,
and the investor who pauses,” Strategy International, a research and policy
think tank, said in a recent report.
Tech
vulnerabilities are evident in other parts of the world. China controls much of
the world’s hardware manufacturing. In Taiwan, which China has threatened to
take by force, one company, TSMC, produces the majority of the world’s advanced
microchips. And South Korean plants within artillery distance of North Korea
turn out much of the world’s memory chips.
Xiaomeng
Lu, a director at Eurasia Group, a risk-management consultancy that studies the
interaction of emerging technologies and geopolitics, said the Iran war will
bruise the efforts of Gulf countries to lure major tech companies, particularly
to the United Arab Emirates, which neighbors Iran.
“Their
ambitions are built on the assumption of geopolitical stability,” she said.
The
magnitude of the war’s ultimate impact may partly depend on how it is resolved.
If the war ushers in new Iranian leadership that is less confrontational with
the United States and Israel, it could bring more stability and investment, Ms.
Lu said. But if the Iranian government is weakened but remains in power, it
could create the risk of further disruptions and conflict in the years ahead.
“Time
frame is key,” she said. “If the war wraps up within a month, people will
forget about this. If it goes on for months and months we’ll be in very
different territory.”
Karen
Weise contributed reporting.
Adam
Satariano is a technology correspondent for The Times, based in London.
Paul
Mozur is the global technology correspondent for The Times, based in Taipei.
Previously he wrote about technology and politics in Asia from Hong Kong,
Shanghai and Seoul.



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