Silicon Valley’s Bad Bet on the Gulf
Silicon Valley’s Bad Bet on the Gulf
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/persian-gulf/silicon-valleys-bad-bet-gulf
Publish Date: 2026-06-11 00:00:00
Source Domain: www.foreignaffairs.com
- In May 2025, President Donald Trump announced $2.2 trillion in bilateral deals with Gulf nations focusing on AI infrastructure, involving U.S. defense and economic partnerships.
- The agreement attracted American technology companies due to cheap energy, access to sovereign wealth funds, lower regulatory barriers, and U.S. government approvals for restricted chip sales.
- The infrastructure supporting this technology is now at risk due to regional conflicts, specifically attacks by Iran on AWS data centers in the UAE and Bahrain using Shahed drones.
- The disruption of submarine cables in the Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea threatens data traffic between Asia, Europe, and the Gulf.
- The U.S. bet on the Gulf for AI infrastructure is now considered a mistake due to vulnerabilities exposed by recent attacks.
- Companies and users of this infrastructure are facing significant short-term and potentially long-term costs and risks.
- The framework for Gulf AI build-out, mainly designed for peacetime technology competition, did not adequately prepare for physical security threats.
- The situation calls for reassessing current projects’ viability and costs, while planning future investments in more secure locations.
- U.S. companies are increasingly relocating sensitive workloads to safer regions and enhancing insurance coverage.
- The U.S. government should redirect AI investments to safer regions while reinforcing agreements that serve U.S. economic and national security interests.