New Delhi: Tensions between Iran and the United States & Israel have taken a sharp turn into the tech space, with data centres and AI infrastructure now being named in direct military threats. In a new video released by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, senior officials warned that American-linked digital infrastructure across the region could face attacks if conflict escalates further.
The warning has caught attention across the telecom and cloud industry. It signals that large-scale AI facilities, often seen as neutral infrastructure, may now be viewed as strategic targets. For companies building multi-crore digital assets in the Middle East, this raises fresh concerns around security, uptime, and geopolitical risk.
Iran leveling up
They released a video of threatening to strike 1GW Stargate AI datacenter in the UAE.The data center is hidden on Google maps they even shown that pic.twitter.com/LuOGIp3BVj
— Furkan Gözükara (@FurkanGozukara) April 3, 2026
IRGC warning, AI datacenters as targets
In the video, IRGC spokesperson Brigadier General Ebrahim Zolfaghari issued a direct warning tied to U.S. actions. He said, “Should the USA proceed with its threats concerning Iran’s power plant facilities the following retaliatory measures shall be promptly enacted.”
He went further and added, “All power plants, energy infrastructure, and information and communications technology of the Zionist regime, and all similar companies within the region that have American shareholders shall face complete and utter annihilation.”
That line has triggered alarm in the tech sector. The mention of “information and communications technology” clearly includes cloud platforms, telecom networks, and AI data centres.
Abu Dhabi’s ‘Stargate’ AI facility comes into focus
The same video zooms into a desert location near Abu Dhabi using satellite imagery. A message appears on screen saying, “Nothing stays hidden to our sight, though hidden by Google.” It then shows what is claimed to be a large AI data centre, reportedly valued at around ₹2.5 lakh crore or $30 billion.
Reports circulating online suggest the site could be part of a major AI infrastructure project sometimes referred to as Stargate. The video even switches to a night vision style view to highlight the full scale of the facility.
Why this matters for tech and telecom
This is not just military posturing; it has real implications for the wider tech ecosystem. Hyperscale data centres in the Middle East could face new kinds of security threats that go beyond cyberattacks and move into physical risk. Cloud outages in such regions can quickly ripple across markets in Asia, Europe, and Africa, hitting apps, payments, and enterprise systems.
There are also unverified claims in the same context about damage to some Amazon AWS facilities following rocket strikes, though no official confirmation has come out yet.