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Middle East Great Cloud Migration of 2026
Sovereign Infrastructure: The Great Cloud Migration of 2026
The kinetic strikes on Gulf data centers have forced a radical reassessment of the "Shared Responsibility Model." High-value entities are now de-clouding, moving from US-linked hyperscalers to OpenStack and KVM-based private infrastructure in neutral jurisdictions.
| Origin Country | Key Entities Migrating | Target Neutral Jurisdiction |
|---|---|---|
| United Arab Emirates | Emirates NBD, ADCB, G42 (Sovereign AI) | South Africa (Cape Town), Malaysia (Johor) |
| Saudi Arabia | Saudi Aramco, PIF Subsidiaries (Neom Tech) | South Africa (Johannesburg), Malaysia |
| Qatar | Qatar Airways, Al Jazeera Media Network | Malaysia (Kuala Lumpur) |
| Bahrain / Kuwait | Regional Fintech (Alaan, Hubpay) | South Africa (Teraco Colocation) |
Strategic Drivers by Region
Malaysia (Johor/KL)
Positioned as the ASEAN Trusted Data Corridor. It offers high OpenStack adoption and connectivity via the SEA-ME-WE 6 and APRICOT cables, providing a non-aligned buffer for Asian and Middle Eastern capital.
South Africa (CT/JHB)
A core BRICS+ member offering physical distance from the kinetic zone. Leveraging 2Africa and Equiano cable landings, it has become the preferred site for "Data Embassies" running independent Linux stacks.
The "Shared Responsibility" model is being viewed as a liability when the provider's nationality makes the hardware a military target. The shift is moving from ephemeral cloud instances back to Ansible-managed KVM/Libvirt environments where the organization owns the physical hardware infrastructure.
Infrastructure Analysis: 21 March 2026
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