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Thursday Apr 2 2026 00:00
3 min
In a development that underscores the intricate geopolitical landscape of the Middle East, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has issued a stark warning: any further "strikes" targeting Iranian leadership will result in the IRGC designating US technology and defense companies operating in the region as potential targets.
According to a statement disseminated via the official Tasnim News Agency, these retaliatory attacks could commence as early as Wednesday evening. The IRGC has advised employees of US-affiliated facilities, along with residents within a one-kilometer radius of these locations, to evacuate immediately. The statement listed 18 companies as potential targets, accusing them of participating in "terrorist plots."
The roster of named companies includes a significant number of American tech giants such as Cisco (CSCO), Hewlett Packard (HPQ), Intel (INTC), Oracle (ORCL), Microsoft (MSFT), Apple (AAPL), Google (GOOGL), Meta (META), IBM (IBM), Dell (DELL), Palantir (PLTR), and Nvidia (NVDA). Also included were Tesla (TSLA), Boeing (BA), and financial institution JPMorgan Chase (JPM), along with General Electric (GE). Additionally, two companies from the UAE, Spire Solutions and G42, were mentioned.
A spokesperson for Microsoft declined to comment, while representatives from other named companies did not immediately respond to requests for interviews.
Responding to the situation, a White House official informed POLITICO that "US forces have always had the capability to deter any Iranian attack," citing a "90% reduction in ballistic missile and drone strikes by the regime" as evidence.
This escalation follows earlier threats made by the IRGC against several companies with facilities in Israel and the Gulf region, many of which appear on Tuesday's expanded list. Companies such as Google, Microsoft, Palantir, IBM, Nvidia, and Oracle are now considered additional targets due to the perceived military applications of their technologies.
The ongoing events in the Middle East highlight the inherent risks associated with the expansion of US technological infrastructure in the region, an expansion that gained momentum during the Trump administration. Earlier this month, an Iranian drone strike led to a power outage at Amazon Web Services (AWS) data centers in the UAE and Bahrain. Experts have cautioned that such incidents are unlikely to be isolated.
Sam Winter-Levy, a research fellow in the Technology and International Affairs Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told POLITICO regarding the AWS incident, "As data centers become increasingly critical to all sorts of critical infrastructure, these kinds of attacks are absolutely not going to be the last."
The persistent warnings from Iran present a significant threat to American technology firms and raise critical questions about how to safeguard such facilities in the event of an attack. Hamza Chaudhry, director of the AI and National Security project at the Future of Life Institute, stated last month to POLITICO, "We can no longer treat these AI infrastructures as purely commercial assets; they are national security infrastructures to some extent."
These threats place technology companies operating in the Middle East in an unprecedented situation, where commercial interests become inextricably linked with strategic national security considerations, and digital infrastructure finds itself caught in the crossfire of geopolitical conflicts.
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