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Amazon Says AWS’s Bahrain Region Disrupted Following Drone Activity

Drone activity disrupts AWS Bahrain region, forcing workload shifts and exposing risks to cloud infrastructure in conflict zones.By Greg Bensinger, Reuters
March 24, 2026

SAN FRANCISCO, March 23 (Reuters) – Amazon (AMZN.O), opens new tab said on Monday ​its Amazon Web Services region in Bahrain has been “disrupted” amid the current conflict ‌in the Middle East, marking the second time in a month that its operations have been affected by the war.

The disruption is due to drone activity in the area, an Amazon spokesperson said, following a ​Reuters inquiry. Reuters is first to report on the disruption. As of Monday night, ​AWS had not updated its status page to reflect the impact.

Amazon did ⁠not immediately respond to a query on whether its Bahrain facility was directly hit by ​a drone attack or if the disruption was due to nearby strikes.

The company said it ​is helping to migrate customers to alternate AWS regions while it recovers, though it did not provide additional details such as the extent of the damage or how long it anticipates the disruption to last.

“As this ​situation evolves and, as we have advised before, we request those with workloads in the ​affected regions continue to migrate to other locations,” Amazon said in a statement Monday night.

AWS is Amazon's cloud ‌computing ⁠unit and critical for the operation of many well-known websites and government operations. It is also the company's main driver of profits.

The disruption is the second instance of drone activity affecting AWS' Bahrain region since the start of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran. Earlier this month AWS reported ​that facilities in Bahrain ​and the United ⁠Arab Emirates had lost power and it was working to recover, including transferring computing workloads to other regions.

The strike on the UAE facility was ​the first time military action had disrupted a major U.S. tech ​company's data ⁠center, Reuters reported earlier in March. Amazon said it anticipated a “prolonged” recovery due to structural damage.

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Published On: March 24, 2026Tags: , , , , , , ,
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