The announcement comes amid a broader European push to assert greater control over its digital infrastructure.
Microsoft has pledged to legally challenge any potential attempt by any government to force the company to suspend its cloud operations in Europe, issuing a sweeping commitment aimed at reassuring European customers amid growing geopolitical volatility and concerns over digital sovereignty.
Microsoft President Brad Smith unveiled the move on April 30, both in a statement and during remarks at a conference hosted by the Atlantic Council in Brussels. The announcement lays out Microsoftโs new five-point โEuropean Digital Commitmentsโ plan, which aims to reinforce trust in the companyโs services amid strained transatlantic ties.
At the heart of the plan is a legally binding promise to contest in court any directive that seeks to suspend Microsoftโs cloud services hosted in the European Union.
โIn the unlikely event we are ever ordered by any government anywhere in the world to suspend or cease cloud operations in Europe, we are committing that Microsoft will promptly and vigorously contest such a measure using all legal avenues available, including by pursuing litigation in court,โ Smith stated.
Smith said Microsoftโs vow will be written directly into contracts with European national governments and the European Commission, elevating what might otherwise be a corporate pledge into a formal, legally binding commitment. He noted that Microsoft has experience fighting lawsuits from the previous Trump administration and the Obama administration.
โWe went to court four times against the Obama administration over the protection of customer data and privacy, including European data. We went to court against the Trump administration to protect the rights of employees who are immigrants,โ he said at the conference. โTwice weโve gone all the way to the United States Supreme Court. We not only go to courtโwe tend to win the cases we bring.โ
Should Microsoft lose in court, however, contingency plans are in place to ensure continuity of services, he said. These include agreements with European partners and the storage of critical software code in secure repositories in Switzerland, which would allow European entities to maintain cloud operations without U.S. involvement, if needed.
While Smith noted that the risk of such a shutdown order is โexceedingly unlikelyโ and not currently under discussion in Washington, he said that the concern is real and growing among European officials.
Byย Tom Ozimek