Evidence was provided in a report by the Guardian on Wednesday, according to Press TV. This showed the company was quietly intertwined with the vast surveillance dragnet of the administration targeting Palestinians.
The bomb investigation reveals that Unit 8200, the Israeli military’s infamous cyber intelligence arm, has stored millions of intercepted Palestinian phones on Microsoft’s Azure Cloud servers in Europe since at least 2022.
Surveillance devices, called “one million people per hour,” are fueled by a staggering pack of data, mostly housed in the Netherlands and Ireland, research found.
From the bomb-covered neighborhoods of the Gaza Strip to every nook and cranny of the occupied West Bank, Daly shows that he is monitoring Palestinian life with microscopic details.
Meanwhile, one insider explained the growing enthusiasm among Israeli officials who view it as the foundation of “long-term control” in Gaza, as stored data continues to inform operations despite communications being destroyed across Palestinian territory.
Officers sifted through intercepted calls that took place near the bombing to justify airstrikes in populated civilian areas.
As one insider said, “When they need to arrest someone and there’s no good reason to do so, that’s where they find their excuses.”
Cloud trading: Protected by corporate negativity
In the second half of 2021, Yossi Sariel, a former commander for 8,200 years, met Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella at the company’s headquarters.
The topic focused on migrating Israeli military data to Microsoft’s cloud, including surveillance targeting Palestinians.
Sariel promised to “solve problems in the Palestinian arena.”
Despite public ignorance claims, Microsoft engineers have found that they have helped to build a protective “security layer” around intercepted data.
Internal communications show that Nadella described the partnership as “critical” and pledged corporate resources to support the efforts. A senior Israeli source said Sariel “browned a lot” about his relationship with the high-tech CEO.
By mid-2025, the partnership allowed the storage of over 11,500 terabytes of Israeli military voice surveillance on Azure servers.
Unit 8200 reportedly planned to shift 70% of the total data, including classified material, to Microsoft’s platform.
Complete control via AI, “noisy messages”
The survey further reveals Microsoft’s irrefutable contribution to the unit’s 8,200-year desire to expand as much as possible so that it can be monitored “always, everyone.”
Towards the purpose, the company lent the units AI-driven tools, such as “noisy messages.” This scanned text for suspicious languages and evaluated potential threats algorithmically.
Meanwhile, one insider explained the growing enthusiasm among Israeli officials who view the system as a bedrock of “long-term control” in Gaza.
Microsoft’s technology has already contributed significantly to the October 2023 regime war of genocide on coastal slivers, which have advocated the lives of more than 61,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children.
Benefits beyond principles
For Microsoft, the surveillance partnership reportedly promised “hundreds of millions of dollars” in future revenue.
It was rated as a “brand moment” that could push azure to the top of global cloud wars.
Outmart by resistance
Despite its monumental dimensions, the collaboration failed to operate historic 2023 historic 2023 historic territories in October 2023.
The operation led to the obsession of hundreds of Zionists that the administration used as an excuse to launch the genocide.
Sariel quietly resigned and fell to what he called “intelligence and operational failures” for Unit 8200.
This investigation is far from the first one that uncovers the essential nature of American tech giants’ contributions to the administration’s local atrocities.
MNA
