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Home » AWS Bahrain disruption highlights cloud risks
aws-bahrain-disruption-highlights-cloud-risks
aws-bahrain-disruption-highlights-cloud-risks
Cloud

AWS Bahrain disruption highlights cloud risks

By Claire ShenMarch 25, 2026Updated:March 25, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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  • AWS confirmed disruption in its Bahrain cloud region following nearby drone activity.
  • The incident raises concerns about the vulnerability of data centres to geopolitical and physical risks.

What happened: Drone activity triggers cloud disruption

Amazon Web Services (AWS) experienced disruption in its Bahrain cloud region following nearby drone activity, according to Al Jazeera.

The incident occurred against a backdrop of heightened regional tensions, with AWS stating that the disruption was linked to precautionary measures taken in response to the drone presence. The Bahrain region is a key hub for AWS in the Middle East, supporting businesses, governments and digital services across the region.

According to the report, the company did not specify the full extent of the outage but confirmed that services were affected. Cloud regions typically consist of multiple data centres designed to provide redundancy, but external security threats can still impact operations.

AWS launched its Bahrain region in 2019, making it the first major public cloud availability zone in the Middle East. The region serves customers across the Gulf Cooperation Council states and is particularly critical for government workloads subject to data residency requirements. This is not the first time cloud infrastructure has faced disruption from external factors — providers including AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud have experienced outages linked to power failures and natural disasters in recent years.

AWS launched its Bahrain region in 2019, making it the first major public cloud availability zone in the Middle East. The region serves customers across the Gulf Cooperation Council states and is particularly critical for government workloads subject to data residency requirements. This is not the first time cloud infrastructure has faced disruption from external factors — providers including AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud have experienced outages linked to power failures and natural disasters in recent years.

AWS is one of the world’s largest cloud providers, offering infrastructure that underpins a wide range of online services. The Bahrain region, launched to serve Middle Eastern customers, plays a critical role in delivering low-latency services to regional users.

The disruption highlights how physical security risks can intersect with digital infrastructure, particularly in regions experiencing geopolitical instability.

Also Read: Nvidia expands AWS partnership with million-GPU AI supply deal
Also Read: Amazon bets on AI to double AWS revenue outlook

Why it’s important

The incident illustrates a growing reality for cloud providers: digital infrastructure is increasingly exposed to physical and geopolitical risks.

Data centres, often viewed as secure and resilient, depend on stable environments to operate effectively. External threats — including drone activity, conflict or security incidents — can disrupt operations even when technical systems remain intact.

For enterprises relying on cloud services, such disruptions can have immediate operational and financial consequences, particularly if services are unavailable or degraded.

From a financial perspective, outages can affect customer trust and lead to increased investment in security and redundancy measures.

The event also underscores the importance of geographic diversification in cloud infrastructure. Providers often distribute workloads across multiple regions to mitigate risk, but regional disruptions can still pose challenges.

More broadly, the incident reflects how digital infrastructure is becoming entangled with geopolitical dynamics. As cloud services underpin critical sectors such as finance, healthcare and government, their resilience is increasingly a matter of strategic importance.

The AWS Bahrain disruption therefore highlights a key shift: safeguarding digital infrastructure now requires addressing not only technical reliability but also physical and geopolitical risks.

As cloud adoption grows, ensuring resilience in volatile environments may become one of the industry’s most pressing challenges.

Amazon Bahrain cloud computing Data Centres digital infrastructure Infrastructure Security
Claire Shen

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