Global technological and geopolitical circles were deeply alarmed by claims that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) had attacked an Oracle data center in Dubai amid escalating tensions in West Asia. Shortly after news of an attack on an Amazon cloud facility in Bahrain broke, there was speculation that US-affiliated digital infrastructure in the Gulf region was directly threatened. Dubai authorities, however, swiftly denied the accusations, referring to them as “fake news” and claiming that no such strike had occurred in the emirate.
According to official updates, the Dubai Government Media Office issued a statement on X rejecting all claims that an attack had occurred on Oracle’s infrastructure in Dubai. The statement came after several online posts and regional reports amplified the alleged strike, further fueling uncertainty amid the ongoing Iran-related conflict in the region.
“Reports suggesting any strike or attempted attack in Dubai are fake news and have no basis in fact.”
~Dubai Government Media Office
Iran’s Claim Follows Earlier Amazon Bahrain Attack Report:
The controversy emerged after Iran’s state-linked channels claimed that the IRGC had launched a fresh wave of retaliatory operations targeting the UAE, Bahrain, and Israel following recent US-Israeli strikes on Iranian industrial sites. Among the alleged targets, Iranian sources reportedly named an Amazon cloud computing centre in Bahrain and an Oracle-linked data facility in Dubai.
The Bahrain incident had already heightened concerns after local authorities confirmed that civil defence teams were responding to a fire at a company-linked facility following what was described as an Iranian attack. Reuters had earlier reported damage and service issues affecting Amazon’s cloud infrastructure in Bahrain and the UAE region, which added weight to concerns around regional cyber and infrastructure vulnerability.
“The latest wave targeted infrastructure linked to US companies in the Gulf.”
~Tasnim News Agency / IRGC-linked statement
Due to this rise in tensions the focus has changed from traditional military targets to vital digital infrastructure, such as cloud servers and data centers that power enterprise applications, banking systems, and communications throughout the Middle East.
Oracle Dubai Claim Remains Unverified as Officials Push Back:
While Iranian state media claimed the Oracle facility was struck, multiple outlets later reported that the claim could not be independently verified. Dubai’s quick denial has further complicated the narrative, with fact-checks from major publications indicating that no confirmed evidence of damage or disruption has emerged from Oracle’s Dubai operations.
Several international reports, including from India Today and Hindustan Times, noted that the claim followed the Bahrain Amazon incident and may have been part of a broader information escalation linked to the regional conflict.
“The claim remains unverified, while Dubai has officially denied any attack.”
~Hindustan Times World Desk
Gulf Data Infrastructure Under Global Spotlight:
The incident has once again highlighted how cloud infrastructure and hyperscale data centres have become strategic assets during modern geopolitical conflicts. With companies like Oracle and Amazon operating critical infrastructure across the Gulf, any credible threat to these facilities has implications for banking, logistics, aviation, and enterprise services across multiple countries.
“Even unverified claims can disrupt confidence in regional digital infrastructure.”
~Reuters Middle East Desk
Even though Dubai has categorically denied the Oracle strike claim, the episode highlights the growing role of technology infrastructure in regional warfare narratives and information battles. For now, the official position remains clear: no Oracle data centre in Dubai was attacked, according to the government’s fact-check response.




