Iran has incorporated commercial data centers into its drone strike range, signaling a new phase in global threats to technology infrastructure security. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) carried out successive drone attacks this week on data centers operated by Amazon.com and Microsoft in the Gulf region. In a recent post on Telegram, the Iranian official media outlet Fars News Agency stated that "striking Amazon.com and Microsoft in these operations has dealt a severe blow to the adversary's technological and information infrastructure." This incident represents the first known case of a commercial data center suffering a physical attack during a conflict.
These attacks serve as a clear warning to global data center operators and investors. With the global data center construction market projected to surpass $3 trillion by the end of 2028, the strategic value of counter-drone security systems is being rapidly reassessed.
Details of the Attacks: Escalating Targets from AWS to Microsoft On Monday, IRGC drones hit two Amazon Web Services (AWS) data centers located in the UAE, with another drone narrowly missing an AWS facility in Bahrain. Days later, Iranian state-affiliated media further claimed that the IRGC had designated and attacked Microsoft data centers in the Gulf region as targets.
The attacks employed low-cost "kamikaze" suicide drones. These weapons are inexpensive, difficult to intercept, and have undergone extensive real-world testing in the conflict in Ukraine over recent years, leading to rapid technological iteration.
Previously, market discussions about data center risks primarily focused on financing, site selection, and construction phases, with limited attention paid to the physical security threats faced by completed facilities. Traditional perimeter protection measures—such as metal fences and surveillance systems—are almost useless against autonomous drones or swarm attacks.
The conflict in Ukraine over the past four years has accelerated the evolution of drone tactics, bringing warfare capabilities once expected by the 2030s into the present. However, the defensive systems for global commercial infrastructure have not kept pace with this rapid development.
This incident will directly prompt data center operators to reassess their security investments. Amid the global data center construction boom, Counter-Unmanned Aircraft Systems (C-UAS) are expected to be upgraded from peripheral configurations to standard infrastructure. For investors currently planning or holding data center assets, rising security costs will become a significant new variable.
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