The Uninsurable Data Center
The myth of the data center as a neutral, hardened bunker just got shattered by Iranian drones. Pure Data Centre Group has frozen all Middle East investments after shrapnel from an intercepted attack damaged its Abu Dhabi campus on Yas Island. This is not an isolated incident. Amazon Web Services took direct hits on two facilities in the UAE and a near miss in Bahrain, triggering fire suppression systems that caused water damage and cost the company an estimated $150 million in waived fees for March alone. The financial math is brutal: standard civil law frameworks force operators to eat the cost of war damage, and insurers are now openly refusing to write policies for the region. Big Tech gambled that geopolitical risk was a theoretical exercise, but a live warzone is a terrible place to park a trillion dollars in compute.
The Target List and the Retreat
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps has made the threat explicit, publishing a list of “new targets” that includes offices and data centers for Google, Microsoft, Palantir, IBM, Nvidia, and Oracle. An Oracle facility in Dubai was struck by shrapnel on April 2 after an aerial interception. This is no longer about collateral damage; tech infrastructure is an intentional military objective. The response from Silicon Valley has been a confused scramble. Some are looking to downsize from massive campuses to smaller, distributed facilities, which destroys the economies of scale that make AI training profitable. Others are frantically calling defense contractors to install anti-drone systems, turning server farms into armed compounds. The entire premise of the Stargate initiative and the Gulf’s bid to become a third AI superpower alongside the US and China is now in doubt. Pure DC’s CEO is calling the pause “temporary,” but rebuilding investor confidence after a war zone is a multi decade problem, not a quarterly one.
Source: Arstechnica
