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Iran threatens ‘Stargate’ AI data centers

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Why This Matters

Iran's recent threats and missile attacks targeting regional data centers, including those linked to major AI infrastructure projects like Stargate, highlight the growing geopolitical risks facing the global tech industry. These developments underscore the vulnerability of critical digital infrastructure amid escalating conflicts, which could impact global supply chains, data security, and the deployment of AI technologies. The situation emphasizes the importance of resilient and secure infrastructure strategies for tech companies operating in volatile regions.

Key Takeaways

In Brief

Iran has warned of further attacks on data centers across the Middle East in response to ongoing threats and air strikes from the United States.

Iran’s military said that if the U.S. went ahead with its threats to hit its civilian infrastructure, the country would retaliate with its own strikes against U.S.’ energy and tech infrastructure in the region, according to a video released late last week and shared widely on Sunday of Iranian military spokesperson Ebrahim Zolfaghari.

The video released by Iran shows an image of a globe, then zooming in on the Stargate data center in the United Arab Emirates with the message of “nothing stays hidden to our sight, though hidden by Google.”

Stargate is a $500 billion joint venture between OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle to build AI data centers, announced in January 2025. The initiative originally struggled to get off the ground due to alleged funding troubles and costs associated with tariffs, and sought to expand with new data centers internationally.

The latest threat comes after U.S. President Trump threatened to strike Iran’s civilian infrastructure, like power plants and water desalination plants, by the end of Tuesday if Iran doesn’t reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global shipping channel that has choked global supply chain traffic since the start of the war in February.

Several data centers in the region have already been hit by missiles as a result of the war.

Iranian missiles struck Amazon Web Services (AWS) data centers in Bahrain and an Oracle data center in Dubai. Iran also threatened tech companies including Nvidia and Apple by name last week.