An Iranian strike damaged Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud computing infrastructure in Bahrain.
According to multiple sources, the strike affected AWS operations in Bahrain, with Bahrain’s Interior Ministry reporting a fire at a company facility due to Iranian aggression. Civil defense teams responded to extinguish the blaze. The attack appears linked to facilities hosted or associated with Bahrain’s major telecom provider Batelco in the Hamala area.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard threats issued around March 31–April 1 to target U.S. tech companies in the Middle East, including Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Apple, accusing them of supporting “U.S.-Israeli operations. Earlier Iranian drone and missile strikes in March 2026 on AWS data centers in Bahrain and the UAE, which caused outages affecting banking, apps, payments, and other services.
Amazon acknowledged disruptions and, in one case, waived a month’s charges for affected customers. AWS’s Bahrain region, launched in 2019, is a key cloud hub for the Middle East, supporting businesses, governments, and services across the Gulf. Exact details on the latest damage extent, service outages, or specific impacts remain limited, as Amazon has not publicly commented in detail on the April 1 report.
No major widespread global outages have been broadly reported yet from this specific strike. The attacks mark a notable escalation in the ongoing Iran-related conflicts, shifting focus toward critical digital and civilian infrastructure rather than purely military targets. Analysts have described it as a new kind of war, highlighting vulnerabilities in cloud computing, which powers much of the modern economy and even some U.S. military and intelligence workloads.
Iran-linked media has claimed the Bahrain facility was targeted due to alleged support for adversarial military activities. This is part of a pattern of regional tensions, with prior strikes also disrupting AWS in the area.
Iran-US tech tensions have escalated sharply in 2026 amid the broader Iran-US-Israel conflict, with Iran directly targeting American technology infrastructure—particularly cloud data centers and offices—in the Middle East. This marks a shift toward treating private tech companies as extensions of U.S. military and intelligence capabilities.
Iranian drones struck two AWS facilities in the UAE and damaged a third in Bahrain via direct hit or nearby debris. This caused power outages, fires, and prolonged service disruptions affecting banking, payments, delivery apps, enterprise software, and regional digital services.
Amazon confirmed physical damage and noted recovery efforts, including workload transfers to other regions. In one case, the company waived fees for affected customers. Bahrain’s Interior Ministry described it as Iranian aggression, with civil defense responding. This follows multiple prior disruptions in the same region.
Iran’s state-affiliated media claimed the Bahrain facility was targeted specifically for allegedly supporting U.S. military and intelligence activities. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued explicit warnings, naming 18+ U.S. tech and related companies as legitimate targets starting April 1.
The list includes: Tech giants: Apple, Google (Alphabet), Microsoft, Meta, Amazon (AWS), Nvidia, Intel, Oracle, IBM, Cisco, HP, Dell. Others: Tesla, Boeing, Palantir, JPMorgan Chase, GE, and even the UAE-based AI firm G42 in some references. Iran accuses these firms of providing cloud computing, AI, satellite, and analytics tools that enable U.S.-Israeli targeting operations, assassinations, and military actions against Iran.
The IRGC urged employees to evacuate offices in the region and warned civilians nearby to stay away, with threats of attacks on offices and data centers in the Gulf and Israel. Earlier threats listed specific regional offices and data centers of Amazon, Google, Microsoft, IBM, Nvidia, and Palantir.
The Gulf has become a major hub for U.S. tech investment due to cheap energy, growing markets, and connectivity. Data centers power much of the region’s and increasingly global digital economy, including AI training and inference. Some U.S. military workloads reportedly run on commercial clouds like AWS.
Analysts describe this as a shift—physical strikes on civilian-critical digital infrastructure rather than purely military targets. It exposes vulnerabilities in hyperscale cloud setups and raises questions about the resilience of AI-dependent systems. These actions follow U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran, with Iran framing tech firms as direct enablers of its adversaries.
Outages hit financial services, consumer apps, and businesses across the Gulf. Recovery has been described as “prolonged” in some cases due to physical damage. Tech companies activated emergency protocols, assessed sites, and in some cases moved workloads. Employee safety measures were heightened.
Concerns include potential cyberattacks (Iran has a history of cyber operations), further physical strikes, and long-term doubts about the Gulf as a safe location for massive AI/data center investments. Tech infrastructure is now viewed as a legitimate battlefield target by Iran, blending kinetic attacks with the digital domain.
The situation remains fluid—U.S. tech firms have significant redundancies globally, but regional operations face heightened risks. No major confirmed follow-on strikes on the full IRGC target list beyond the AWS incidents were widely reported as of early April 2026, but tensions are high.






