Microsoft Israel’s general manager, Alon Haimovich, has left the company after an internal investigation found that its Israeli subsidiary had been using Azure cloud services in ways that violated Microsoft’s code of ethics. In Haimovich’s absence, Microsoft’s global leadership has handed temporary oversight of the Israeli office to Microsoft France—an unusual arrangement that signals just how seriously Redmond is treating the fallout. Several other senior managers in Microsoft Israel’s governance department have also stepped down.The departures follow a probe triggered by pressure from both inside and outside the company over Microsoft’s cloud contracts with Israel’s Ministry of Defense. Israeli business newspaper Globes, which first reported the story, says a team of investigators flew into Israel weeks ago to examine the sales department’s dealings with the ministry. What they found wasn’t reassuring: usage patterns that violated Microsoft’s terms of service, and conduct that Globes’ sources described as lacking “full transparency” toward global management.
The Unit 8200 fallout was just the beginning
The controversy has its roots in reporting by The Guardian and +972 Magazine published in August 2025, which revealed that Unit 8200—Israel’s elite military intelligence agency—had used Microsoft’s Azure platform to store millions of intercepted Palestinian phone calls from Gaza and the West Bank. The data, stored primarily on servers in the Netherlands, gave intelligence officers the ability to play back civilian calls at scale. Microsoft’s vice-president Brad Smith was unequivocal: “We do not provide technology to facilitate mass surveillance of civilians.” The company terminated Unit 8200’s cloud access in September 2025.But according to Globes, Unit 8200 was only the tip of the iceberg. The investigation uncovered that other Israeli Ministry of Defense units had also been using Azure in ways that crossed Microsoft’s lines—and that some of this activity was routed through European servers, exposing Microsoft to potential scrutiny from EU regulators and GDPR-related legal risk.
Why Microsoft’s position in Israel is particularly complicated
Microsoft is uniquely vulnerable here compared to Amazon and Google. When Israel awarded its major government cloud contract—known as the Nimbus project—in 2021, Microsoft was left out. Amazon and Google won the deal and agreed to build data centers on Israeli soil, meaning defense-related data stays within Israel’s borders and largely beyond the reach of European regulators. Microsoft had no such arrangement. Any ministry data flowing through Azure was landing on servers in Europe, making it a far softer target for regulatory pressure.Haimovich, who joined Microsoft in 2019 and had built the Israeli business into one of the company’s fastest-growing global markets, was reportedly summoned by the investigation team after it visited Microsoft Israel’s offices near Tel Aviv. In a farewell note to staff, he made no mention of the controversy—only that Israel had become “one of Microsoft’s fastest-growing markets worldwide.”The timing is sensitive. Microsoft and Israel’s Ministry of Defense are due to renew their contract later this year. According to Globes, both sides remain interested in continuing the relationship, though on a smaller scale—and much of the defense computing workload has already migrated to Amazon and Google’s Israeli infrastructure.
