Iran Escalates Conflict, Designates Major Tech Firms Including Amazon and Google as Military Targets
On March 11, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) announced a significant escalation in hostilities amid the ongoing conflict involving the United States, Israel, and Iran. The IRGC, via the Tasnim News Agency, declared major technology companies such as Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Nvidia, IBM, Oracle, and Palantir as legitimate military targets. This announcement, framed by the Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters, Iran’s unified military command, marks a notable expansion of Iran’s military objectives to encompass infrastructure warfare.
Targeting of Technology Infrastructure
The IRGC’s declaration was not merely symbolic. It followed a series of Iranian drone strikes that targeted three Amazon Web Services (AWS) facilities in the Gulf region. Two data centers in the United Arab Emirates were directly hit, while a third facility in Bahrain sustained damage from a nearby explosion. AWS confirmed that these attacks resulted in structural damage and disrupted power systems, leading to significant service outages for various financial institutions in the region. Iran explicitly stated that these facilities were targeted due to their association with U.S. military operations. The Uptime Institute characterized this as the first confirmed kinetic strike on a hyperscale cloud provider.
The targeted facilities included Google’s office in Dubai, its cloud center in Qatar, Nvidia’s largest research and development facility in Haifa, IBM’s AI research center in Be’er Sheva, Palantir’s offices in Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv, Oracle’s locations in Jerusalem and Abu Dhabi, and additional Amazon facilities in Tel Aviv and Haifa. Iran justified these selections by asserting that these companies provide technology with direct military applications to U.S. and Israeli armed forces, a claim supported by documented contracts with the Pentagon.
Economic and Infrastructure Impact
The conflict has severely impacted economic infrastructure. On the same day as the announcement, Iranian drones struck near Dubai International Airport, injuring four individuals. While the airport continued operations, the repercussions for insurance, diplomacy, and logistics were significant. Iran’s actions have effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, a critical passage for global oil supply, resulting in at least fourteen vessels being struck since the onset of hostilities and seven mariners reported dead. A Thai cargo ship was set ablaze in the strait, with three crew members still unaccounted for after twenty were rescued.
Despite U.S. military actions, which included the destruction of sixteen Iranian minelayers in the area, Brent crude prices surged by 20% since February 28, causing widespread financial market instability.
Cyber Warfare Escalation
The conflict has also extended into cyberspace, where Israel launched what analysts described as the largest cyberattack in history against Iran on February 28, drastically reducing internet connectivity within the country. In retaliation, Iran executed cyber operations targeting Gulf states, Jordan, Cyprus, and the United States, logging over 600 attack claims in a matter of days. The GPS and automatic identification systems of more than 1,100 vessels were disrupted through coordinated electronic warfare. A cyberattack on Israeli railways resulted in evacuation warnings being broadcast within stations, blurring the lines between kinetic and cyber warfare.
Legal and Ethical Implications
This escalation has highlighted the inadequacies of existing international law. The Geneva Conventions, last updated in 1977, were designed for traditional warfare and do not address the complexities of modern conflicts involving dual-use digital infrastructure and AI in military operations. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has called for new legal frameworks to address these challenges. A UN Group of Governmental Experts on Lethal Autonomous Weapons has been deliberating since 2014, yet no binding treaty or enforcement mechanism exists.
The legal void has significant implications beyond the battlefield. Standard insurance policies typically exclude losses from military actions, meaning that companies like AWS, Google, Nvidia, Microsoft, Oracle, IBM, and Palantir would bear the financial burden of any strikes against their facilities. The Gulf states have attracted substantial Western technology investments based on the premise of stability, but the current conflict raises concerns about the viability of such investments.
The Challenge of AI in Warfare
An additional concern is the epistemic failure inherent in AI-assisted targeting systems. These systems, trained on historical conflict data, may encode biases regarding who qualifies as a combatant. In densely populated environments, the risk of misidentification is not an exception but a systemic issue. The U.S. military is investigating incidents, such as a Tomahawk missile mistakenly striking an Iranian girls’ school. The principle of distinction, which requires differentiating combatants from civilians, is challenged in an algorithmic warfare context where decisions are made at machine speed.
The Need for Governance
The ongoing conflict has underscored the necessity for urgent governance reforms. Any effective framework must ensure meaningful human oversight in AI-assisted lethal decision-making, provide explicit protections for civilian digital infrastructure, impose legally binding constraints on autonomous weapons, and establish multilateral accountability mechanisms for civilian harm. These measures are essential for maintaining a functional international order in a landscape where a company’s data center can be deemed a legitimate military target.
The UN Security Council’s recent resolution, which called for Iran to cease its attacks on Gulf neighbors, does not address the broader implications of the infrastructure war that Iran has declared. The need for comprehensive dialogue and action is critical to prevent further escalation and protect civilian interests.
As reported by famedelivered.com.
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Published on 2026-03-13 11:28:00 • By Editorial Desk

