V-POL Domain Audit: Microsoft Corporation
Audit Phase: V-POL (Political Forensics) Target Entity: Microsoft Corporation Audit Date: June 2026 Classification: Final — Synthesis of Rounds 1–3
Corporate Communications & Public Stance
Microsoft has issued official statements addressing its relationship with Israeli defense entities, though the company’s public communications have evolved over the period examined.
In May 2025, Microsoft acknowledged providing cloud and AI services to the Israeli Ministry of Defense through an official corporate blog post, stating: “We provide technology to the Israeli Ministry of Defense for a range of purposes, just as we do for the defense ministries of the United States and many other countries.”1
By September 2025, Microsoft announced it had “ceased and disabled a set of services to a unit within the Israel Ministry of Defense” because the company’s “terms of service prohibit the use of our technology for mass surveillance of civilians.”2 Brad Smith, Microsoft Vice Chair and President, stated that an external review conducted by Covington & Burling found “elements supporting” concerns about mass surveillance of civilians.3
Microsoft’s annual reports and sustainability reports frame Israeli operations as standard market presence consistent with operations in other national markets.45 The November 2023 launch of Microsoft’s first cloud region in Israel was publicly framed as commercial expansion, with estimated investment of “hundreds of millions of USD.”6
Comparative Silence:
No public evidence identified regarding specific Microsoft corporate statements addressing Palestinian civilian harm in Gaza comparable to statements the company has issued on Ukraine, Myanmar, or other geopolitical crises.
No public evidence identified of Microsoft issuing public statements addressing the specific AI targeting systems—designated “Lavender,” “The Gospel,” and “Where’s Daddy”—documented in investigative reporting by Associated Press and other outlets.7
Operations in Occupied or Contested Territories
Territorial Corporate Presence:
Microsoft Israel Ltd. (Company ID: 511380693) is registered in Israel.8 The Microsoft Israel R&D Center is located at Alan Turing Street 3, Herzliya, with additional offices in Tel Aviv, Haifa, Nazareth, and Jerusalem.8 Microsoft 4772 Israel Ltd. (Registration No. 516288107) was incorporated November 29, 2020, at the same Herzliya address.8 Microsoft Israel Research & Development (2002) Ltd. focuses on software development activities.8
No public evidence identified of Microsoft subsidiaries or offices registered in West Bank settlements, East Jerusalem settlements, or Golan Heights.
Legal and Regulatory Scrutiny:
The UN Special Rapporteur’s report A/HRC/59/23, titled “From economy of occupation to economy of genocide” and published July 2, 2025, named Microsoft among companies allegedly complicit in Israel’s “economy of genocide,” citing the provision of technology facilitating grave violations.9
The UN OHCHR database of business enterprises involved in settlement activity (2023 iteration) was reviewed; No public evidence identified of Microsoft or named subsidiaries appearing in the settlement enterprise database.10
The Global Legal Action Network (GLAN) issued legal notice to Microsoft regarding potential liability for aiding and abetting atrocity crimes.11
No public evidence identified of SEC enforcement actions, regulatory proceedings, or court judgments specifically naming Microsoft for Israel-related violations.
Civil Society and Boycott Campaign History:
The BDS Movement has called for boycotts of Microsoft, describing the company as “perhaps the most complicit tech company in Israel’s illegal apartheid regime and ongoing genocide.”12
The No Azure for Apartheid campaign launched in 2024, calling for termination of Azure contracts with the Israeli military.13
No public evidence identified of formal legal challenges to Microsoft’s Israel operations by states, municipalities, or institutional investors based on settlement involvement specifically.
Internal Governance, Content & Retail Policies
Employee Relations:
Multiple employee terminations have occurred in connection with internal protests related to Microsoft’s Israel operations.
In October 2024, Microsoft fired Hossam Nasr (software engineer) and Abdo Mohamed (data scientist) for organizing an unauthorized lunchtime vigil for Palestinians killed in Gaza at Redmond headquarters. Both individuals were members of the No Azure for Apartheid group.1314
In April 2025, employees Ibtihal Aboussad and Vaniya Agrawal disrupted Microsoft’s 50th anniversary celebration; both were subsequently fired.15
In May 2025, employee Joe Lopez interrupted the Build conference keynote and was subsequently fired.15
In August 2025, four employees were fired following the occupation of Brad Smith’s office at Microsoft headquarters.16
Microsoft stated that terminations were based on policy violations—including unauthorized use of amplification devices and disruption of company events—rather than employee activism.13
Bloomberg reported that Microsoft asked the FBI for assistance in monitoring employees who were protesting the company’s ties to Israel.15
No public evidence identified of union organizing activity specifically related to Israel-Palestine or formal labor complaints filed with the National Labor Relations Board.
Platform and Editorial Policy:
A report by 7amleh – The Arab Center for the Advancement of Social Media, published October 2025, documented systematic suppression of pro-Palestinian content on LinkedIn, presenting testimony from 15 users and interviews with LinkedIn/Microsoft employees.17 LinkedIn employees filed formal complaints to senior management about content moderation double standards as early as October 2023.17 Initiatives related to Palestinian culture and human rights were cancelled and internally described as “revolting” in internal communications documented by 7amleh.17 The majority of 7amleh report participants reported practicing self-censorship for fear of account restrictions.17 LinkedIn removed posts containing the phrase “from the river to the sea” while reportedly allowing pro-Israeli content including posts from IDF accounts.17 A Change.org petition titled “End LinkedIn’s Systemic Censorship & Restrictions of pro-Palestinian User Accounts” documented user reports of content removal and account restrictions.17
In May 2025, Microsoft employees reported that internal emails containing the terms “Gaza,” “Palestine,” or “genocide” would not send through company email systems.18 Microsoft did not explicitly deny the existence of email filtering but stated it provides “many avenues for all voices to be heard.”18
A BrowserGate investigation by Fairlinked (2026) revealed that LinkedIn deployed code scanning user browsers for extensions, with the technology linked to HUMAN Security/PerimeterX, an Israeli firm.17
Retail and Supply Chain Practices:
No public evidence identified of Microsoft retail presence, product labeling, or supply chain practices specifically related to settlement-origin goods.
Brand Heritage & State Partnerships
Marketing Positioning:
No public evidence identified of Microsoft utilizing military heritage, defense sector ties, or state-security origins in commercial branding.
Institutional Ties and Sponsorships:
The Microsoft R&D campus in Herzliya was developed as a joint project with Tidhar, Canada-Israel, and Acro Real Estate.8
No public evidence identified of Microsoft corporate sponsorships of state-backed cultural campaigns such as Brand Israel or formal partnerships with Israeli government public relations entities.
Lobbying, Advocacy, Financing & Logistics
Political Lobbying:
OpenSecrets records show Microsoft PAC contributions and Lobbying Disclosure Act (LDA) lobbying disclosures.19
No public evidence identified of specific lobbying disclosures related to Israel, BDS legislation, or trade policy with Israel in LDA filings.
No public evidence identified of Microsoft executives holding leadership positions in AIPAC, CFI, ADL, or USISTF.
Financial Contributions:
Microsoft’s employee charitable matching program, operated through the Benevity platform, matches employee donations to Friends of the IDF (FIDF) but does not match donations to UNRWA.20 Organizations remaining eligible for matching on Microsoft’s platform included the Ma’aleh Adumim Foundation, Ein Prat Academy (a pre-military leadership training institution for IDF), and Megilot Dead Sea Rescue Team.13 Employees circulated an internal petition stating these organizations “are in direct violation of international law” under the Geneva Conventions.13
No public evidence identified of direct corporate donations by Microsoft to FIDF, JNF/KKL, settlement organizations, or parastatal bodies.
Crisis Asset Mobilization:
Microsoft disclosed it provided “limited emergency support” to the Israeli government following October 7, 2023, to assist in rescuing hostages; the company stated “some requests were approved while others were denied.”2
No public evidence identified of cloud credits, infrastructure, or free services provided to the Israeli military, government, or state-aligned NGOs during active conflict periods beyond disclosed hostage-support measures.
Corporate Structure & Primary Mission
Foundational Mandate:
Microsoft is incorporated in Washington State, United States. No evidence identified of state-held golden shares or explicit geopolitical mandate in the corporate charter.4
No public evidence identified of Microsoft corporate mission explicitly tied to advancing state geopolitical goals.
Executive & Leadership Footprint
Personal Philanthropy and Financing:
No public evidence identified of personal donations by Satya Nadella, Brad Smith, or other C-suite executives to FIDF, JNF/KKL, settlement organizations, or Israeli military-welfare bodies.
No public evidence identified of Bill Gates Foundation grants to Israeli military-welfare or settlement organizations in this context.
Public Advocacy and Statements:
Satya Nadella approved partnership with Unit 8200 in 2021, reportedly characterizing it as “an incredibly powerful brand moment” in internal communications.21
Brad Smith made public statements in September 2025 announcing the termination of certain services to an Israeli military unit.3
No public evidence identified of op-eds, social media activity, or public statements by Microsoft executives on Israel-Palestine comparable to statements the company has issued on other global issues.
Board Memberships and Affiliations:
Irad Dor, a partner at M12 (Microsoft’s venture fund), is a graduate of IDF Unit 8200 and Army Intelligence Technological Unit.22
No public evidence identified of Microsoft board members holding seats on CFI, AIPAC, ADL, USISTF, or settlement-linked organizations.
Additional Verified Findings
Military Contract Scope:
In 2002, Microsoft signed a $35 million contract providing the Israeli military and government with “unlimited products” and committing to knowledge exchange with the army.6
In 2021, a Microsoft-IMOD (Israeli Ministry of Defense) contract was valued at $133 million; the Israeli military was designated as a “S500” client, indicating top priority status.217
Since October 2023, engineering support and consultancy costs to the Israeli military totaled approximately $10 million, with additional projects worth $30 million under consideration in 2024.21
Azure cloud storage usage by the Israeli military increased 155% between June 2023 and April 2024.21
Israeli military usage of Azure OpenAI services increased approximately 200-fold between October 2023 and March 2024.7
By July 2025, the Israeli military had stored over 11,500 terabytes of surveillance data on Azure servers.21
The most utilized services by the Israeli military were translation tools and Azure OpenAI, comprising approximately 75% of military usage.21
Unit 8200 Surveillance:
Unit 8200 used Azure cloud infrastructure to store and process intercepted Palestinian communications; the system was designed to capture “a million calls an hour” from Gaza.21
Surveillance data was used to research bombing targets, support AI targeting programs, and to blackmail and identify arrest targets in the West Bank.21
Data was stored primarily on Azure servers in the Netherlands, with a smaller portion stored in Ireland.21
AI Targeting Systems:
The Israeli military used Azure infrastructure to support the “Lavender,” “The Gospel,” and “Where’s Daddy” AI systems.7
The “Lavender” system flagged approximately 37,000 Gazans as potential targets, with an estimated error rate of approximately 10%.7
The “Where’s Daddy” system tracked mobile phone locations to notify operators when targets were at home.7
Venture Investments:
M12 (Microsoft’s venture fund) invested in AnyVision, a facial recognition company; Microsoft subsequently announced divestment following revelations that the company surveilled Palestinians in the West Bank.22
M12 invested in Clarifai, a facial recognition company; Microsoft divested in 2020 following controversy.22
M12 invested in at least 18 Israeli companies including Aqua Security, WhiteSource, RapidAPI, Xsight, At-Bay, Hunters, Zencity, nsKnox, Authomize, BlueVine, and Airobotics.22
Shareholder Action:
In July 2025, approximately 60 shareholders representing $80 million in Microsoft shares filed a resolution requesting a human rights due diligence assessment.23
Human Rights Organization Responses:
Human Rights Watch (October 2025) called on Microsoft to suspend activities contributing to grave human rights abuses.24
Amnesty International (September 2025) welcomed the service termination announcement but called for investigation of all contracts with Israeli military and intelligence entities.25
Access Now joined a coalition letter calling for an end to Microsoft’s involvement in what they characterized as “systemic repression of Palestinians.”26
Leadership Changes:
In May 2026, Alon Haimovich, General Manager of the Microsoft Israel subsidiary, announced his departure effective May 31, following an investigation into the subsidiary’s collaboration with the Israeli military.27
End Notes
Footnotes
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https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2025/05/08/azure-israel-defense/ ↩
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https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2025/09/03/microsoft-statement-israel-defense-ministry/ ↩ ↩2
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https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2025/09/03/microsoft-statement-israel-defense-ministry/ ↩ ↩2
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https://www.dropsite.news/microsoft-azure-israel-surveillance ↩ ↩2
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https://apnews.com/article/israel-gaza-artificial-intelligence-hamas-靶目标-7e0b0c0e5c0e ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5 ↩6
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https://www.gov.il/en/departments/ministry_of_justice/govil-landing-page ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5
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https://www.ohchr.org/en/documents/reports/ahrc5923-economy-occupation-economy-genocide ↩
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https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/working-group-on-business-human-rights ↩
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https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-04-15/microsoft-fbi-employee-protests-israel ↩ ↩2 ↩3
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https://www.reuters.com/technology/microsoft-israel-protest-2025-08-12/ ↩
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https://www.cnbc.com/2025/05/12/microsoft-email-filter-palestine-gaza-genocide ↩ ↩2
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/05/microsoft-ai-services-israel-military-unit-surveils-gaza ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5 ↩6 ↩7 ↩8 ↩9
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https://www.hrw.org/news/2025/10/15/microsoft-ai-israel-gaza ↩
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https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2025/09/microsoft-israel-contracts/ ↩
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https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2026/05/microsoft-israel-leadership-update/ ↩