Pentagon reconsiders £8bn Microsoft contract after Amazon protest
The filing does not address Amazon’s broader argument that the bidding was improperly influenced by Donald Trump’s dislike of Amazon.
The Pentagon is reconsidering its awarding of a major cloud computing contract to Microsoft after rival tech giant Amazon protested over what it called a flawed bidding process.
US government lawyers said in a court filing this week that the Defence Department “wishes to reconsider its award decision” and take another look at how it evaluated technical aspects of the companies’ proposals to run the 10 billion dollar (£8 billion) computing project.
The filing does not address Amazon’s broader argument that the bidding was improperly influenced by Donald Trump’s dislike of Amazon and its chief executive, Jeff Bezos.
Mr Bezos owns the Washington Post, a news outlet the president has often clashed with.
Amazon Web Services is a market leader in cloud computing services and had long been considered a leading candidate to run the Pentagon’s Joint Enterprise Defence Infrastructure project, known as Jedi.
The project will store and process vast amounts of classified data, allowing the US military to improve communications with soldiers on the battlefield and use artificial intelligence to speed up its war planning and fighting capabilities.
Amazon sued the Pentagon after Microsoft won the contract in October. Work on the project has been halted as the lawsuit proceeds.
The judge presiding over the bid protest in the US Court of Federal Claims said earlier this month that Amazon’s challenge was likely to have merit on some technical grounds involving pricing.
The Pentagon is asking her for 120 days to reconsider “certain aspects” of its decision.
Amazon said in a statement it is pleased the government is taking correction action if it “fully insulates the re-evaluation from political influence and corrects the many issues affecting the initial flawed award”.
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said one possible outcome is that the Pentagon could end up splitting the award between Microsoft and Amazon, or with other vendors.