Contents

Amazon

Amazon
BDS Rating
Grade
A
BDS Score
860
V-MIL
9.2
V-ECON
8.8
V-POL
5.41

1. Executive Dossier Summary

Company: Amazon.com, Inc. 1

Jurisdiction: UNITED STATES (Delaware, 19808) 1

Sector: E-commerce, Cloud Computing, Artificial Intelligence, Digital Streaming 2

Leadership:

  • Executive Chair: Jeffrey P. Bezos 3
  • President & CEO: Andy Jassy 3

Intelligence Conclusions:

    • Direct Military Complicity: Amazon, through its Amazon Web Services (AWS) division, is a direct, knowing, and contractually-bound technology partner to the Israeli “defense establishment” via the $1.2 billion “Project Nimbus” contract.5 Leaked contract terms reveal Amazon waived its own terms of service, contractually forfeiting its right to deny services to any Israeli government entity, including the military, or restrict the use of its technology for human rights abuses.6
  • Operational Complicity in Gaza: Amazon’s complicity is not merely contractual; it is operational. In July 2024, a high-ranking Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) commander, Col. Racheli Dembinsky, publicly confirmed that the army’s internal systems were overloaded and that it is actively using civilian cloud infrastructure, specifically naming AWS, for advanced AI and data processing in its 2023-2025 war on Gaza. This technology was referred to as part of a “weapons platform”.7
  • Structural Economic Alignment: Amazon’s $7.2 billion investment in the AWS Israel (Tel Aviv) Region 9 and, most critically, its 2015 acquisition of Israeli chipmaker Annapurna Labs 10, creates a structural dependency. Annapurna is the core developer of Amazon’s proprietary AWS chips (Graviton, Nitro) 10, making Israel’s tech ecosystem fundamental to Amazon’s global cloud dominance and profitability. This alignment of core business interests is more powerful than any single contract.
  • Governance Aligned with Surveillance State: The 2020 appointment of Gen. (Ret.) Keith B. Alexander, the former Director of the NSA and US Cyber Command, to Amazon’s Board of Directors as the Chair of the Security Committee 3 represents a deliberate governance alignment with the US-Israel military-surveillance complex, facilitating high-trust relationships with clients like the IDF.
  • Ideological Complicity (Internal Policy): Amazon’s corporate policy demonstrates a clear ideological choice. The company actively suppresses internal dissent, notably suspending Palestinian engineer Ahmed Shahrour in 2025 for protesting Project Nimbus.12 This action proves Amazon’s willingness to silence Palestinian voices to protect its lucrative military-intelligence contracts.

2. Corporate Overview & Evolution

Origins & Founders

Amazon.com, Inc. was founded in 1994 by Jeffrey P. Bezos.3 An investigation of Bezos’s early life, education, and founding capital reveals no specific or direct ideological or financial ties to Israel, pro-Israel networks, or Zionist ideology.14 The company’s origins are firmly rooted in e-commerce and Wall Street financial technology applications.14

Assessment: Amazon’s complicity with the Israeli state is not an “original sin” of its founding. It is a calculated, strategic, and mature-stage development, pursued for clear economic and technological advantage. This complicity is driven almost entirely by its dominant and most profitable subsidiary, Amazon Web Services (AWS), which CEO Andy Jassy formerly led.4

Leadership & Ownership

  • Jeffrey P. Bezos (Executive Chair): Founder and largest individual shareholder.13 Analysis of political spending by Bezos-linked PACs shows significant donations (nearly $17 million in the 2023-2024 cycle), with a heavy preference for Republicans.16 However, the provided data does not show direct, strategic contributions to pro-Israel lobbying groups like AIPAC. His ownership of The Washington Post has faced accusations of pro-Israel bias in its editorial coverage 17, but this represents a media, not a direct corporate, link.
  • Andy Jassy (President & CEO): Jassy’s entire career is tied to AWS, the division responsible for all strategic Israeli ties.4 His public statements following October 7, 2023, were initially one-sided, condemning attacks on “civilians in Israel”.20 Only after sustained internal pressure, including a petition from 1,700 employees 18, did Jassy acknowledge “lost lives in Israel and Palestine”.18
  • Gen. (Ret.) Keith B. Alexander (Board Director): Former Director of the National Security Agency (NSA) and Commander of U.S. Cyber Command (2005-2014).11 He joined Amazon’s board in September 2020 11 and, most critically, serves as Chair of the Security Committee.3 Alexander has a public record of speaking at Israeli cybersecurity conferences (e.g., Tel Aviv University’s CyberWeek, Team8’s Rethink Cyber) and publicly advocating for deep US-Israel cybersecurity cooperation.22

Assessment: The appointment of General Alexander in September 2020, as Amazon was in the final stages of bidding for the $1.2B Israeli military-intelligence contract 5, is a deliberate, strategic governance move. Alexander is not just any general; he is the face of the American mass surveillance state (the “Snowden-era” NSA) 25 and a public proponent of US-Israel cyber-partnerships.22 Placing him as Chair of the Security Committee 3 was a high-level signal to the Israeli “defense establishment” that Amazon operates with a shared ethos, mitigating security concerns and embedding a “revolving door” operative within its core governance. This appointment was likely instrumental in securing the Project Nimbus contract in April 2021.

Operations & Presence

Amazon’s presence in Israel is deep, strategic, and focused on AWS.

  • R&D: AWS opened its first R&D centers in Israel in 2014.10 It maintains major offices in Tel Aviv (within the Azrieli Sarona tower) and Haifa.26
  • Strategic Acquisitions: Amazon has serially acquired key Israeli tech startups and integrated their intellectual property directly into AWS’s global offerings:
    1. Annapurna Labs (2015): A ~$370M acquisition of an Israeli chipmaker.10 This is the most critical acquisition.
    2. CloudEndure (2019): A $200M-$250M acquisition of a cloud migration/backup startup.31
    3. E8 Storage (2019): An acquisition of a flash storage startup.31
  • Strategic Investment: In August 2023, Amazon launched the AWS Israel (Tel Aviv) Region, a cluster of three data centers.10 This region is a contractual prerequisite for Project Nimbus, which mandates that sensitive Israeli state data be stored within Israel’s borders.5 This launch is part of a planned $7.2 billion investment in Israel through 2037.9

Assessment: Amazon is not merely “operating” in Israel; it is economically integrated with and structurally dependent on the Israeli high-tech ecosystem for its core global business. The $7.2B investment and the $1.2B military contract are mutually reinforcing.

Public Positioning vs Behaviour

  • Positioning: Amazon publicly commits to human rights frameworks, such as the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, and maintains its own AI ethics policies.37 Its spokespersons issue generic statements condemning “discrimination or harassment”.12
  • Behaviour: Amazon’s conduct demonstrates a complete subordination of these principles to its Israeli state contracts.
    1. Project Nimbus: It signed a contract explicitly waiving its right to enforce its terms of service against military human rights abuses.6
    2. Internal Suppression: It systematically silences internal dissent, warning Arab employees 18 and suspending Palestinian engineer Ahmed Shahrour for “threatening behavior” after he protested Nimbus.12
    3. Settlement Complicity: It instituted a 2019 shipping policy that offered free shipping to illegal West Bank settlements, treating them as part of Israel, while excluding Palestinian towns.39

Assessment: The contradiction is profound. Amazon’s public human rights policies are demonstrably a public relations facade, nullified by its contractual obligations to the Israeli military and its internal suppression of employees who cite those same policies.

Core Sensitivity:

  • Project Nimbus: This $1.2 billion contract 5 is the company’s single most direct and indefensible tie to the Israeli military. It provides the core AI and cloud “weapons platform” 7 that the IDF has confirmed it is actively using for “operational effectiveness” in its 2023-2025 war on Gaza.8

3. Timeline of Relevant Events

Date Event Significance
2013 AWS begins its AWS Activate program in Israel. Establishes early-stage integration with the Israeli startup ecosystem, a key talent and acquisition pipeline.9
2014 AWS opens its first R&D center and office in Israel. Marks the beginning of a permanent, physical R&D and economic presence in the country.10
2015 Amazon acquires Israeli chipmaker Annapurna Labs for ~$370M. Key Strategic Event. This acquisition forms the basis of AWS’s proprietary hardware (Graviton, Nitro), making Amazon’s global business structurally dependent on Israeli R&D.10
2019 (Jan) Amazon acquires Israeli cloud backup startup CloudEndure for ~$200M. Continues the pattern of “innovation harvesting” from the Israeli tech sector to build AWS’s global portfolio.30
2019 (July) Amazon acquires Israeli flash storage startup E8 Storage. Further deepens AWS’s technological integration with Israeli-developed IP.30
2019 Amazon offers free shipping to Israel, including illegal West Bank settlements, while excluding Palestinians. A direct corporate action that economically subsidized and normalized the illegal occupation, treating settlements as part of Israel.39
2020 (Mar) Amazon reverses its discriminatory settlement shipping policy. Demonstrates corporate responsiveness to negative public relations, not proactive ethical due diligence.39
2020 (Sep) Gen. (Ret.) Keith B. Alexander, ex-NSA Director, joins Amazon’s Board. A major governance shift, aligning Amazon’s security posture with the US-Israel surveillance state in the run-up to the Nimbus bid.3
2021 (Apr) Israeli gov’t selects AWS and Google for the $1.2B Project Nimbus contract. The Core Military Contract. Provides advanced cloud/AI services to the “government, the defense establishment, and others.”5
2021 (Oct) 300+ Amazon employees (with Google employees) publish an anonymous letter condemning Project Nimbus. Marks the beginning of sustained, organized internal dissent against the company’s military complicity.41
2022 (Apr) Amazon (via its Industrial Innovation Fund) invests in Israeli autonomous robotics startup BionicHIVE. Demonstrates continued, active financial investment in the Israeli tech ecosystem.42
2023 (Aug 1) AWS officially launches its Israel (Tel Aviv) Region. A massive infrastructure deployment, necessary to fulfill the Nimbus contract’s local data-hosting requirements.10
2023 (Aug) Amazon announces a $7.2 billion investment plan in Israel through 2037. Signals a massive, long-term strategic and economic commitment to the State of Israel, tied to the AWS region.9
2023 (Oct 10) CEO Andy Jassy posts on X, calling the “attacks against civilians in Israel… shocking and painful.” A one-sided leadership statement that ignores Palestinian suffering and aligns the corporation with the Israeli state’s narrative.20
2023 (Dec) Over 1,700 Amazon employees petition CEO Jassy to end Project Nimbus. A significant escalation of internal pressure, explicitly linking the contract to the repression of Palestinians in Gaza.18
2024 (July) IDF Col. Racheli Dembinsky (Mamram unit) publicly confirms the army’s use of AWS in the Gaza war. The “Smoking Gun” Confirmation. An active IDF commander states AWS AI and storage are being used for “operational effectiveness” in Gaza, calling the cloud a “weapons platform.”7
2025 (Sep) Amazon suspends Palestinian engineer Ahmed Shahrour for protesting Nimbus. A direct, punitive corporate action to silence dissent and protect the Nimbus contract, demonstrating clear ideological alignment.12
2025 (Oct) Leaked Nimbus contract details reveal “secret code” data-sharing and waiver of terms-of-service. Confirms Amazon conspired with the Israeli gov’t to bypass legal norms and contractually agreed to facilitate military use.6

4. Financial & Ownership Exposure

Investors / Shareholders

No specific, non-incidental pro-Israel or Zionist-linked ideological capital has been identified in the provided research. The user’s directive to exclude broad-market institutional investments (e.g., Vanguard, BlackRock) is noted. The complicity demonstrated in this report is not driven by shareholder ideology but by corporate strategy.

Contracts / Trade

  • Project Nimbus: The primary contract. A $1.2 billion deal (shared with Google) to provide cloud computing, AI, and machine learning services directly to the Israeli government and its “defense establishment”.5

Joint Ventures / R&D

  • AWS Israel (Tel Aviv) Region: A $7.2 billion capital expenditure plan (2023-2037) to build and operate local data centers.9 This is a massive, long-term economic venture, preconditioned on the Nimbus contract.
  • Acquisitions (IP & Talent): Annapurna Labs (~$370M), CloudEndure (~$200-250M), and E8 Storage (Undisclosed) represent a combined >$570M in direct acquisition of Israeli companies, integrating their IP and talent into AWS’s global infrastructure.29

Political / Philanthropic Donations

The provided data shows Amazon and Bezos-linked PACs donate heavily, with a preference for Republicans, but not specifically to pro-Israel lobbying groups like AIPAC.16

The absence of significant, direct corporate PAC donations to AIPAC is a critical finding. A common model of corporate complicity is “lobbying,” where companies donate to groups like AIPAC to gain political favor. The data does not show this for Amazon. Instead, it shows a far deeper model: direct economic integration. Amazon does not need to lobby for Israel’s favor; its $7.2B investment, its reliance on Annapurna Labs for its global hardware, and its $1.2B military contract make it a core partner. This is structural complicity, not transactional complicity. It is more robust, more permanent, and more serious than a simple PAC donation, as the company’s own profitability is now tied to the success of the Israeli tech-military state.

Funding Table: Strategic Economic & Military Commitments

Date Event Significance
2013 AWS begins its AWS Activate program in Israel. Establishes early-stage integration with the Israeli startup ecosystem, a key talent and acquisition pipeline.9
2014 AWS opens its first R&D center and office in Israel. Marks the beginning of a permanent, physical R&D and economic presence in the country.10
2015 Amazon acquires Israeli chipmaker Annapurna Labs for ~$370M. Key Strategic Event. This acquisition forms the basis of AWS’s proprietary hardware (Graviton, Nitro), making Amazon’s global business structurally dependent on Israeli R&D.10
2019 (Jan) Amazon acquires Israeli cloud backup startup CloudEndure for ~$200M. Continues the pattern of “innovation harvesting” from the Israeli tech sector to build AWS’s global portfolio.30
2019 (July) Amazon acquires Israeli flash storage startup E8 Storage. Further deepens AWS’s technological integration with Israeli-developed IP.30
2019 Amazon offers free shipping to Israel, including illegal West Bank settlements, while excluding Palestinians. A direct corporate action that economically subsidized and normalized the illegal occupation, treating settlements as part of Israel.39
2020 (Mar) Amazon reverses its discriminatory settlement shipping policy. Demonstrates corporate responsiveness to negative public relations, not proactive ethical due diligence.39
2020 (Sep) Gen. (Ret.) Keith B. Alexander, ex-NSA Director, joins Amazon’s Board. A major governance shift, aligning Amazon’s security posture with the US-Israel surveillance state in the run-up to the Nimbus bid.3
2021 (Apr) Israeli gov’t selects AWS and Google for the $1.2B Project Nimbus contract. The Core Military Contract. Provides advanced cloud/AI services to the “government, the defense establishment, and others.”5
2021 (Oct) 300+ Amazon employees (with Google employees) publish an anonymous letter condemning Project Nimbus. Marks the beginning of sustained, organized internal dissent against the company’s military complicity.41
2022 (Apr) Amazon (via its Industrial Innovation Fund) invests in Israeli autonomous robotics startup BionicHIVE. Demonstrates continued, active financial investment in the Israeli tech ecosystem.42
2023 (Aug 1) AWS officially launches its Israel (Tel Aviv) Region. A massive infrastructure deployment, necessary to fulfill the Nimbus contract’s local data-hosting requirements.10
2023 (Aug) Amazon announces a $7.2 billion investment plan in Israel through 2037. Signals a massive, long-term strategic and economic commitment to the State of Israel, tied to the AWS region.9
2023 (Oct 10) CEO Andy Jassy posts on X, calling the “attacks against civilians in Israel… shocking and painful.” A one-sided leadership statement that ignores Palestinian suffering and aligns the corporation with the Israeli state’s narrative.20
2023 (Dec) Over 1,700 Amazon employees petition CEO Jassy to end Project Nimbus. A significant escalation of internal pressure, explicitly linking the contract to the repression of Palestinians in Gaza.18
2024 (July) IDF Col. Racheli Dembinsky (Mamram unit) publicly confirms the army’s use of AWS in the Gaza war. The “Smoking Gun” Confirmation. An active IDF commander states AWS AI and storage are being used for “operational effectiveness” in Gaza, calling the cloud a “weapons platform.”7
2025 (Sep) Amazon suspends Palestinian engineer Ahmed Shahrour for protesting Nimbus. A direct, punitive corporate action to silence dissent and protect the Nimbus contract, demonstrating clear ideological alignment.12
2025 (Oct) Leaked Nimbus contract details reveal “secret code” data-sharing and waiver of terms-of-service. Confirms Amazon conspired with the Israeli gov’t to bypass legal norms and contractually agreed to facilitate military use.6

Assessment

The financial data reveals a multi-billion-dollar strategy of deep, long-term economic integration. The relationship is not passive; it is a calculated, strategic investment in Israel’s tech ecosystem (via acquisitions and R&D) and its state-military apparatus (via Project Nimbus). The $7.2B capital expenditure 9 and the $1.2B Nimbus contract 5 are mutually reinforcing: the contract requires the local data centers, and the data centers are economically justified by the massive, long-term government contract. This demonstrates active, high-level collaboration.

5. Domains of Complicity

Domain 1: Military & Intelligence Complicity (Project Nimbus)

Goal: To establish that Amazon, through Project Nimbus, is a direct, knowing, and contractually-bound partner to the Israeli military and intelligence apparatus, and that this partnership is being actively used in the 2023-2025 war on Gaza.

Evidence & Analysis:

The evidence for Amazon’s direct military complicity is overwhelming and rests on four pillars: the contract, the terms of the contract, the testimony of the end-user, and the application of the technology.

1. The Contract: Project Nimbus is a $1.2 billion contract awarded in April 2021 to Amazon (AWS) and Google.6 It provides an “all-encompassing cloud solution” for the Israeli “government, the defense establishment, and others”.5 The inclusion of the “defense establishment” as a stakeholder from the project’s inception confirms, at minimum, that this is a direct military-intelligence contract. This is not a case of an incidental military end-user; the military was a planned client from the start.

2. The “Waiver of Ethics” Clause (Pre-meditated Intent): This is the primary prosecutorial evidence of intent. Leaked documents from the Israeli Finance Ministry reveal that to secure the contract, Amazon submitted to “highly unorthodox ‘controls'”.6 The most critical clause contractually forbids Amazon from denying service to any particular entities of the Israeli government, including its military.5 Furthermore, it prohibits the companies from restricting how Israel uses their products, even if this use breaches their own terms of service.6

This clause is a pre-meditated contractual waiver of human rights due diligence. Amazon did not simply fail to conduct due diligence; it signed a contract that makes such diligence legally impossible and would constitute a breach of contract. This demonstrates a deliberate, a priori corporate decision to facilitate military/intelligence use, regardless of any potential violations of international law. It is the legal and contractual embodiment of “knowing” complicity and renders any public-facing human rights policy 37 null and void.

3. The “Conspiracy to Obstruct” Clause: The leaked contract also details a “secret code” or “winking mechanism”.44 This provision obliges Amazon to secretly notify Israel if a foreign court orders the company to hand over data.6 The mechanism involves sending a specific monetary amount (e.g., 1,000 shekels for a US-based request, 3,900 shekels for an Italian-based request) as a coded signal.45 This demonstrates a conspiracy between Amazon and the Israeli state to circumvent and obstruct international legal processes, effectively shielding its client from external legal accountability.

4. The “Smoking Gun” — Direct IDF Confirmation of Use in Gaza: This moves the analysis from contractual to operational complicity. On July 10, 2024, Col. Racheli Dembinsky, commander of the IDF’s Center of Computing and Information Systems unit (Mamram), publicly confirmed at an “IT for IDF” conference that the Israeli army is actively using civilian cloud and AI services in its ongoing war on Gaza.7

  • Her presentation slides explicitly featured the logos of AWS, Google, and Microsoft.7
  • She stated the IDF’s internal “operational cloud” — which she described as a “weapons platform” for target marking and viewing live drone footage — became overloaded after October 2023.7
  • To solve this, the army turned to civilian clouds for “unlimited storage and processing” and, most importantly, “advanced capabilities in artificial intelligence”.8
  • Col. Dembinsky credited this civilian cloud partnership with providing “very significant operational effectiveness” in the Gaza Strip.7

5. The Application — Mass Surveillance and Targeting: Investigative reports, citing security sources, detail how AWS is being used. The IDF’s Military Intelligence Directorate uses AWS servers to store “masses of intelligence information…on almost everyone in Gaza”.8 This “endless storage” is used for mass surveillance (e.g., storing billions of audio files) and has provided “supplementary information” ahead of airstrikes.8

Counter-Arguments & Assessment:

  • Counter-Argument (Amazon): Amazon has a “rigorous global process for responding to lawful and binding orders” and has “not… (had) any processes in place to circumvent… confidentiality obligations”.45
  • Assessment: This statement is demonstrably false. It is directly contradicted by the leaked “secret code” clause, which is a process to circumvent confidentiality obligations.6
  • Counter-Argument (Google/Amazon): The contract is for civilian workloads like “finance, healthcare, transportation, and education”.5
  • Assessment: This is a deliberate misrepresentation. 1) The contract explicitly includes the “defense establishment”.5 2) The contract forbids Amazon from denying service to the military.5 3) An active IDF Colonel has publicly confirmed active military use in Gaza.7

Analytical Assessment: High Confidence. Amazon is a direct, contractual, and operational partner in the Israeli military’s AI-driven surveillance and targeting system. The company knew its services would be used by the military, contractually agreed to waive its own ethical objections, and its services are currently being used to enhance the “operational effectiveness” of the IDF in its war on Gaza.

Named Entities / Evidence Map: T009 (Nimbus Contract), T012 (AWS Region Launch), T016 (IDF Confirmation), T018 (Leaked Contract Terms), E001 (Israeli Gov’t), E002 (IDF), E003 (IDF Mamram), E005 (Google), E010 (Col. Dembinsky).

Intelligence Gaps:

  • The specific AWS AI/ML tools being used by the IDF (e.g., facial detection, automated image categorization, object tracking).
  • A complete, unredacted copy of the Project Nimbus contract.
  • Whether IDF-use data is stored exclusively on the AWS Israel Region or other global regions.
  • The specific role of Annapurna-designed chips (e.g., Trainium, Inferentia) in servicing IDF AI workloads.
  • The exact nature of the “supplementary information” provided by AWS systems for airstrikes.

Domain 2: Economic & Structural Complicity (AWS Israel)

Goal: To demonstrate that Amazon’s complicity is not limited to a single contract (Nimbus) but is a deep, long-term, structural economic alignment, making Amazon’s global business strategy dependent on the Israeli tech ecosystem.

Evidence & Analysis:

1. Massive Capital Investment: Amazon has committed to a $7.2 billion investment in Israel through 2037.9 This is not a passive portfolio investment; it is a direct capital expenditure to build, maintain, and operate the AWS Israel (Tel Aviv) Region.34 This infrastructure is the physical backbone required to service the Project Nimbus contract, which mandates that data be “keep[t] information within Israel’s borders”.5 The $1.2B contract and the $7.2B investment are therefore inextricably linked. The contract provides the anchor tenant and economic justification for the massive infrastructure build-out.

2. Strategic R&D Integration (The “Annapurna Dependency”): This is the most critical structural tie, which provides the motive for Amazon’s military partnership. In 2015, AWS acquired Israeli chipmaker Annapurna Labs for ~$370M.10 Annapurna is not a siloed R&D center; it is the core developer of Amazon’s proprietary, high-performance hardware that powers AWS globally. This includes:

  • AWS Graviton: Amazon’s custom ARM-based CPUs.
  • AWS Inferentia & Trainium: Custom AI/ML accelerator chips.
  • AWS Nitro System: The underlying platform and security chip for all modern AWS servers.10

Amazon’s primary competitive advantage in the multi-trillion-dollar cloud market is its custom-built, cost-effective hardware. This proprietary hardware is what allows AWS to offer better performance at a lower price than competitors (like Microsoft Azure) who often rely on third-party chips (like Intel or Nvidia). This globally-critical hardware is developed by Annapurna Labs, its Israeli subsidiary.10

Therefore, Amazon’s global cloud dominance and profitability are structurally dependent on its R&D wing in Israel. This creates a powerful, self-perpetuating incentive structure. Amazon cannot afford to alienate the Israeli government or “defense establishment,” which fosters the tech ecosystem (and supplies ex-IDF intelligence officers) that Annapurna hires from.

This dependency makes Project Nimbus not just a $1.2B opportunity, but a strategic necessity to protect its far more valuable R&D pipeline and its long-term, $7.2B infrastructure investment. This is a deep, non-incidental economic alignment.

3. Pattern of “Innovation Harvesting”: The Annapurna acquisition was not an isolated event. It was followed by the acquisitions of CloudEndure (2019) for cloud migration 32 and E8 Storage (2019) for flash storage.31 This demonstrates a pattern of Amazon (AWS) using the Israeli tech market as an external R&D lab, acquiring key technologies and integrating them into its global services. Amazon’s Industrial Innovation Fund has also continued this pattern, investing in Israeli robotics startups like BionicHIVE in 2022.42

Analytical Assessment: High Confidence. Amazon’s business model is structurally and economically dependent on its R&D and acquisitions from the Israeli tech ecosystem. This alignment is not passive or incidental; it is a core strategic dependency that pre-dates and reinforces its willingness to enter into military contracts like Project Nimbus.

Named Entities / Evidence Map: T001 (AWS Activate), T002 (R&D Centers), T003 (Annapurna), T004 (CloudEndure), T005 (E8 Storage), T011 (BionicHIVE), T012 (AWS Region), T013 ($7.2B Investment), E002 (AWS Region), E003 (Annapurna Labs), E004 (CloudEndure), E005 (E8 Storage).

Intelligence Gaps:

  • The full valuation and current headcount/budget of Annapurna Labs.
  • The percentage of AWS global hardware (e.g., Graviton/Nitro) that is directly developed by Annapurna.
  • A full list of Israeli startups funded by Amazon’s Industrial Innovation Fund.
  • The extent of collaboration between Annapurna Labs and Israeli academic or military institutions.

Domain 3: Political & Ideological Complicity (Governance & Suppression)

Goal: To establish that Amazon’s leadership and corporate governance demonstrate a deliberate political alignment with the US-Israel military-surveillance complex and that its internal policies are weaponized to suppress Palestinian voices to protect its Israeli state contracts.

Evidence & Analysis:

1. Governance – The “Revolving Door” (Gen. Keith B. Alexander): The most significant evidence of political alignment is the 2020 appointment of Gen. (Ret.) Keith B. Alexander to Amazon’s Board of Directors.11 Alexander is the former Director of the NSA and US Cyber Command 11, and was the face of US mass surveillance exposed in 2013.25 His appointment, just before the Nimbus contract was finalized, is a strategic political act. He was then made Chair of the Security Committee.3 Alexander has a history of speaking at Tel Aviv security conferences (including those hosted by Team8, a firm founded by ex-Unit 8200 officers) and promoting US-Israel cyber-cooperation.22 This appointment embeds the architecture of the US-Israel surveillance state directly into Amazon’s corporate governance, creating a high-trust “revolving door” that legitimizes and de-risks military-intelligence contracts.

2. Leadership Ideology (CEO Andy Jassy): CEO Jassy (who formerly ran AWS) set the corporate tone on October 10, 2023, with a one-sided statement on X (formerly Twitter) condemning the “shocking and painful” attacks on “civilians in Israel,” with no mention of Palestinians.20 This was not a neutral humanitarian statement. Only after significant internal pressure, including a 1,700-person petition 18, did he send a Thanksgiving email acknowledging “lost lives in Israel and Palestine”.18 This demonstrates a default pro-Israel stance, tempered only by public relations damage control.

3. Corporate Policy – Suppression of Palestinian Dissent (The “Shahrour Precedent”): This is the most “prosecutorial” evidence of ideological alignment. Amazon has actively suppressed pro-Palestinian employee speech.38

  • The Case: In September 2025, Amazon suspended Palestinian software engineer Ahmed Shahrour after he posted in internal Slack channels and emailed leadership protesting Project Nimbus.12
  • Amazon’s Stated Reason: “We don’t tolerate discrimination, harassment, or threatening behavior or language”.12
  • Shahrour’s “Violation”: He urged colleagues to join a resistance group and used the word “intifada”.12
  • Analysis: This is a political act, not a neutral HR one. By classifying a Palestinian employee’s protest against a military contract (that is enabling the killing of his people) as “harassment” or “threatening,” Amazon is adopting the Israeli state’s political narrative that equates Palestinian resistance and political speech with terrorism. This is a direct, ideological choice to protect its military contract (Nimbus) over its stated HR policies and the safety of its Arab and Palestinian employees, who reported increased harassment in internal channels.18

4. Corporate Policy – Normalization of Occupation: In 2019, Amazon’s e-commerce platform instituted a shipping policy that offered free shipping to illegal West Bank settlements but excluded adjacent Palestinian towns.39 This policy treated the settlements as a de jure part of Israel, providing a direct economic subsidy and normalization of the illegal occupation. While reversed after public outcry 39, it establishes a clear precedent of pro-occupation corporate policy.

Analytical Assessment: High Confidence. Amazon’s governance (Alexander), leadership (Jassy), and internal policies (the suppression of Shahrour) demonstrate a clear and active political and ideological alignment with Israeli state and military interests, prioritizing its military contracts over employee rights and stated human rights principles.

Named Entities / Evidence Map: T006 (Settlement Policy), T007 (Policy Reversal), T008 (Alexander Joins Board), T010 (Employee Letter), T014 (Jassy Statement), T015 (Employee Petition), T017 (Shahrour Suspension), E006 (Gen. Alexander), E009 (Andy Jassy).

Intelligence Gaps:

  • Internal Amazon HR memos or Slack moderation policies regarding “Palestine,” “Gaza,” or “Zionism.”
  • Minutes from Amazon’s Security Committee, chaired by Gen. Alexander, regarding Project Nimbus.
  • A full list of Amazon PAC donations to leadership PACs or Super PACs, cross-referenced with AIPAC-endorsed candidates. (The provided data 16 is general, not specific to this cross-analysis).

6. Network of Influence

Purpose: To expose the ecosystem that connects Amazon to pro-Israel, military, and surveillance structures, demonstrating that its complicity is not isolated but part of a mutually beneficial network.

Entity Table:

Name Type Role / Link
Israeli Gov’t (Min. of Finance) State Actor Client (Nimbus); Contract signatory.
Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) State Actor (Military) End-user (Nimbus); “Defense establishment” stakeholder.
IDF Mamram (Computing Unit) State Actor (Military) Operational User (AWS); Confirmed use of AWS AI/storage in Gaza war.
Annapurna Labs Acquired Subsidiary Core AWS hardware developer (Graviton, Nitro); Locus of structural dependency.
Google Corporate Partner Co-contractor (Project Nimbus); Jointly complicit in contract terms.
Gen. (Ret.) Keith B. Alexander Individual Amazon Board Member (Chair, Security Committee); Ex-NSA/CYBERCOM Head.
CloudEndure Acquired Subsidiary AWS service provider; Example of “innovation harvesting.”
E8 Storage Acquired Subsidiary AWS service provider; Example of “innovation harvesting.”
Andy Jassy Individual Amazon CEO; Former AWS CEO; Key decision-maker on Nimbus.
Col. Racheli Dembinsky Individual IDF Commander (Mamram); Provided public confirmation of AWS use in Gaza.

Profiles of Key Actors:

E006 – Gen. (Ret.) Keith B. Alexander (Amazon Board Member)

General Alexander represents the “revolving door” that fuses Amazon’s corporate governance with the US-Israel military-intelligence apparatus. As the former Director of the NSA and Commander of US Cyber Command 11, he is one of the world’s most powerful and recognizable surveillance-state figures. His 2020 appointment to Amazon’s board, and specifically his role as Chair of the Security Committee 3, is a strategic move. His public record includes participation in high-level Israeli cybersecurity forums (like Team8’s “Rethink Cyber” event in Tel Aviv, an organization founded by ex-IDF Unit 8200 officers) 24 and advocating for deep, public-private US-Israel cyber-cooperation.22 His presence provides Amazon with unparalleled credibility and access when bidding for and servicing high-stakes military-intelligence contracts like Project Nimbus. He is the human embodiment of Amazon’s political alignment with the surveillance state.

E004 – Annapurna Labs (Amazon Subsidiary)

Annapurna is the lynchpin of Amazon’s structural economic complicity. Acquired in 2015 for ~$370M 30, this Israeli chipmaker is not a minor R&D office; it is the core developer of AWS’s most critical proprietary hardware. This includes the AWS Graviton (CPU) and Inferentia/Trainium (AI) chips, and the AWS Nitro System that underpins all modern AWS infrastructure.10 This makes Amazon’s global competitive advantage and profitability dependent on its Israeli R&D wing. This “Annapurna Dependency” creates a powerful, non-negotiable incentive for Amazon’s leadership to maintain a positive, collaborative relationship with the Israeli state and its “defense establishment,” from which Annapurna recruits talent.

E002/E003 – Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) / Mamram Unit

The IDF is the confirmed end-user of Amazon’s services for military purposes. While the Nimbus contract named the “defense establishment” 5, the July 2024 testimony of Mamram Commander Col. Racheli Dembinsky provides a direct, public, and unambiguous link. Dembinsky confirmed the IDF’s internal “weapons platform” was overloaded and that it is currently using AWS for its “operational effectiveness” in Gaza.7 This entity transforms Amazon’s complicity from a future, contractual risk into a current, operational reality.

7. Sources & Verification Methodology

Methods:

The intelligence in this dossier was collected and cross-verified using multiple OSINT methods.

  • Investigative Journalism & Leaked Documents: Core findings on Project Nimbus rely on reporting from +972 Magazine, Local Call, and The Guardian 6, which obtained and analyzed leaked copies of the contract and related Israeli Finance Ministry documents.
  • Corporate & Military Statements: Direct, primary-source statements from Amazon’s leadership (CEO Andy Jassy) 18, its spokespersons 12, and its Board of Directors disclosures 3 were analyzed. These were cross-referenced with public, primary-source statements from the Israeli military (IDF Col. Racheli Dembinsky).7
  • Corporate Filings & Press Releases: Amazon’s own press releases and blog posts were used to verify the launch of the AWS Israel Region 10, the $7.2B investment 9, and the role of Annapurna Labs.10
  • Media Archives & Human Rights Reports: Broader media reports (e.g., GeekWire, Al Jazeera, Times of Israel) and human rights reporting (American Friends Service Committee, Business & Human Rights Resource Centre) were used to corroborate timelines and details of acquisitions, shipping policies, and internal dissent.12

Verification:

The central prosecutorial claims are verified using a “triangle” of evidence, where a claim is supported by at least three different types of sources:

  1. Contractual Evidence: Leaked documents detailing the terms of Project Nimbus (e.g., the “waiver of ethics” clause).6
  2. Economic Evidence: Corporate press releases detailing the investments and acquisitions that form a structural motive (e.g., $7.2B investment, Annapurna).9
  3. Operational Evidence: Public statements from the end-user confirming active use (e.g., IDF Col. Dembinsky’s confirmation of AWS use in Gaza).7

This methodology ensures that the report’s conclusions are not based on a single source or allegation, but on a documented pattern of corporate behavior, intent, and operational reality.

Analytical Rationale:

This analysis adheres strictly to the user’s mandate to focus on direct, strategic, or intentional relationships. The assessment of Annapurna Labs as a “structural” tie, for example, is based on its documented, non-incidental role in developing Amazon’s core global technology. The report’s “prosecutorial” nature is derived from building a logical case where Amazon’s actions (e.g., signing the Nimbus contract, appointing Gen. Alexander, suspending Mr. Shahrour) are presented as evidence of intent to materially support and align with the Israeli military-intelligence apparatus.

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