Amazon: Drone strikes damaged AWS data centers in Middle East By Sergiu Gatlan March 3, 2026 06:44 AM 0 Amazon has confirmed that three Amazon Web Services (AWS) data centers in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and one in Bahrain have been damaged by drone strikes, causing an extensive outage that is still affecting dozens of cloud computing services. While the company didn't provide further details on the incident, the attacks are likely part of Iran's response to U.S. and Israeli strikes in the Middle East over the weekend. Amazon says the drone strikes have disrupted AWS Middle East (UAE) Region (ME-CENTRAL-1) and the AWS Middle East (Bahrain) Region (ME-SOUTH-1). "Due to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, both affected regions have experienced physical impacts to infrastructure as a result of drone strikes. In the UAE, two of our facilities were directly struck, while in Bahrain, a drone strike in close proximity to one of our facilities caused physical impacts to our infrastructure," the company said in a status page update on Monday, 4:19 PM PST. "These strikes have caused structural damage, disrupted power delivery to our infrastructure, and in some cases required fire suppression activities that resulted in additional water damage. We are working closely with local authorities and prioritizing the safety of our personnel throughout our recovery efforts." At the moment, three availability zones (mec1-az2 and mec1-az3) in the UAE remain "significantly impaired," while a third (mes1-az2) in Bahrain is still affected by a "localized power issue." Amazon is now restoring physical infrastructure, while also working on "multiple software-based recovery paths" that don't require "underlying facilities being fully brought back online." The company is also prioritizing restoring services and tools that would allow customers to back up and migrate data and applications out of the impacted regions. Amazon also advised impacted customers to back up their data and migrate workloads to AWS regions unaffected by these issues. "We recommend customers exercise their disaster recovery plans, recover from remote backups stored in other regions, and update their applications to direct traffic away from the affected regions," Amazon added. "For customers requiring guidance on alternate regions, we recommend considering AWS Regions in the United States, Europe, or Asia Pacific, as appropriate for your latency and data residency requirements." On Monday, the United Kingdom's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) also warned British organizations of a heightened risk of Iranian cyberattacks amid the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. Red Report 2026: Why Ransomware Encryption Dropped 38% Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight. Download our analysis of 1.1 million malicious samples to uncover the top 10 techniques and see if your security stack is blinded. Download The Report Related Articles: Anthropic confirms Claude is down in a worldwide outage UK warns of Iranian cyberattack risks amid Middle-East conflict Amazon: AI-assisted hacker breached 600 Fortinet firewalls in 5 weeks Train for CompTIA, AWS, Cisco & more with this $40 course deal Microsoft Teams outage affects users in United States, Europe
This article describes a kinetic drone strike attack vector causing physical damage to AWS data centers in the UAE and Bahrain, leading to structural, power, and water damage that has significantly impaired multiple availability zones. Amazon advises impacted customers to execute their disaster recovery plans, recover from remote backups stored in other AWS regions, and migrate workloads to unaffected regions such as those in the US, Europe, or Asia Pacific. The NCSC has also warned of a heightened risk of Iranian cyberattacks amid the ongoing conflict.