March 3, 2026
Amazon's cloud unit says drone strikes damaged UAE, Bahrain facilities
AWS says power to its UAE data center was shut down after objects struck the facility, triggering sparks and a fire

Amazon's cloud unit AWS said on Monday its facilities in the UAE and Bahrain were impacted by drone strikes amid the Middle East conflict.
On Monday, AWS said that power to its data center in the UAE was shut down temporarily after objects struck the facility, triggering sparks and a fire.
The UAE is reeling from Iran’s retaliatory missile and drone strikes following U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran. The Iranian strikes hit airports, ports, and residential areas across the country and the wider Gulf.
When Reuters asked AWS whether the incident at the data center was connected to the strikes, the company did not confirm or deny.
AWS said: “At around 4:30 AM PST, one of our Availability Zones (mec1-az2) was impacted by objects that struck the data center, creating sparks and fire.”
According to the company’s website, an “Availability Zone” is made up of one or more connected physical data centers. These zones are separate, isolated locations within each AWS Region.
Fire department cut power to the facility while crews worked to extinguish the fire, AWS said.
It will take several hours to restore connectivity in the affected zone, the data center operator said, adding that other zones in the UAE are operating normally.
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