When the U.S. and Israel launch an offensive against Iran (late February 2026), Tehran will not only retaliate with missiles against military bases. They will choose a highly symbolic and strategic target: Amazon Web Services data centers in the UAE and Bahrain.

This is no random strike. At least three strategic reasons stand behind this decision:
Weakening the U.S. military-technological advantage
Many Gulf data centers support real-time data processing for the AN/TPY-2 radar system, CENTCOM communications, and AI intelligence analysis models. Iran targets them to create a temporary “blind spot” in the U.S. command and control network.

A direct attack on the economic diversification strategies of the Gulf Arab states
The UAE and Saudi Arabia are investing heavily to become global AI hubs. Iran understands that destroying confidence in the security of digital infrastructure will slow down or even reverse the flow of hundreds of billions of dollars into the region. This is a blow to the “post-oil future” of its regional rivals.

Demonstrating a new generation of hybrid warfare:
Iran leverages an asymmetrical advantage: inexpensive drones + precision missiles → inflicting far greater economic and psychological damage than the cost. Simultaneously, it sends the message: “If a superpower attacks our territory, we will bring war to your digital economy and civilian areas.”

Conclusion: The US-Iran conflict is reshaping the concept of “strategic objectives.” Oil was once king; now, data and AI are becoming the new battleground of the digital age’s Superpower Rivalry.
