The fantasy of building an impregnable AI fortress in the Middle East just collapsed under a hail of Iranian drones. Pure Data Centre Group has frozen all new Middle East investments after shrapnel from a missile or drone attack scarred its Abu Dhabi campus, a site explicitly built for hyperscale AI and cloud workloads. CEO Gary Wojtaszek’s grim metaphor that ‘no one’s going to run into a burning building’ should terrify every Silicon Valley boardroom that bet billions on Gulf states as the next AI backbone. This isn’t a temporary blip. It’s a structural revelation that the physical infrastructure powering large language models is catastrophically vulnerable to geopolitics.
The Perverse Economics of Uninsurable War Damage
The financial reckoning is already brutal. Amazon Web Services took a direct hit to two UAE data centers and a near miss in Bahrain, triggering fire suppression systems that waterlogged servers and caused widespread outages for banks, Careem, and Snowflake. The real story is Amazon’s decision to waive all customer charges for the entire Middle East region in March, a $150 million hemorrhage that exposes a broken contract between tech giants and reality. As Tech Policy Press notes, existing civil law frameworks force operators to eat these costs during military conflict. Why? Because insurance companies, the most rational actors in any room, refuse to touch war damage. The industry built trillion-dollar plans on the assumption that sovereign wealth funds would backstop risk. Now those plans look like a suicide pact.
The Iranian Hit List and the End of the Neutral Data Center
Tehran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps is not playing games. They published a direct hit list of ‘Iran’s new targets’ naming Google, Microsoft, Palantir, IBM, Nvidia, and Oracle, explicitly linking these companies to Israeli military tech. This is no longer collateral damage. It is targeted retaliation. The Guard attempted to strike an Oracle facility in Dubai on April 2; shrapnel hit the facade after air defense intercepts. Industry chatter about ‘downsizing to distributed facilities’ or ‘buying anti-drone systems’ from defense contractors is professional cope. You cannot secure a campus against a state actor willing to fire ballistic missiles. The real takeaway is that Big Tech’s neutrality is dead. Building AI data centers in the Middle East now means accepting they are military targets. Pure DC is pausing. Everyone else should be running.
Source: Arstechnica
