'Cartogrophy of Darkness' is a transclusive, collective research platform dedicated to exploring universalisms and the unity of knowledge in our highly obfuscated, crisis-ridden age. The platform is comprised of a triad of spaces: a map, a repository and a periodical.

«خريطة الظّلام» هي منصّة بحثيّة تشاركيّة تستقصي مفاهيم العالميّة والاتحاد المعرفي من منطلق الزمكانيّة الآنية، المتأزمة والمبهمة. تتكون المنصّة من ثلاثيّة حيزيّة تضمُّ خريطة وحاوية وسلسلة.

⤼Oracle’s recent deals with Lebanon x Oracle’s decades-long corporations with the Zionist Entity ⤾

⤼صفقات أوراكل الجديدة مع لبنان × ماهية أوراكل الإستخبراتية وتعاونها المديد مع الكيان⤾

Published

15 December 2025

Preface⌇ تمهيد

 

في عام ١٩٧٧، تأسست شركةأوراكلتحت الإسم المؤقتمختبرات تطوير البرمجياتليكونا أوّل طرفين متعاقدين معها “القوات الجويّة الأمريكيّة” و”وكالة المخابرات المركزية” (سي آي إيه)، ما وضع البنية الأولى لعلاقة وثيقة ومستدامة مع مراكز القوة العسكرية والاستخبارات الأمريكية، لم تلبث إلّا أن تعمقت عبر العقود. واليوم، تُعد أوراكل ذراعاً تكنولوجياً حاسماً للمجمع الحاسوبي والعسكري الأمريكي، فهي مغروسة في عقود البنتاغون السحابية والبنى التحتية لكبريات شركات تصنيع الأسلحة، بينما تقوم في الوقت ذاته بدور المورّد الأساسي للمؤسسة الدفاعية الإسرائيلية، حيث تزوّدها بأنظمة قواعد البيانات والحوسبة السحابية التي تدعم جيش الاحتلال وأجهزة استخباراتها والبنية التحتيّة لاحتلالها. أمّا بالنسبة للبنان، فإن دخول الدولة اللبنانيّة في اتفاقيةاستراتيجيةللتدريب على الحوسبة السحابية والذكاء الاصطناعي مع هذه الشركة يُشكّل خطراً جسيماً، إذ إنه يُشرِك بياناته الوطنية ومستقبله التكنولوجي مباشرة مع كيان استعماري مندمج تشغيلياً مع العدو الأساسي للبنان، أيإسرائيل“. إن هذه الخطوة تنطوي على مخاطر حقيقية تتمثل في إدخال بنى تحتية ستكون مسيّرة بالكامل لمصالح التحالف الصهيوأمريكي الكليبتوقراطي، ومتشابكة تكنولوجياً مع الكيان نفسه، أي جيش الاحتلال، الذي يحوم حاليّاً في جنوب وسماء لبنان ويمثّل تهديداً وجودياً لسيادة لبنان والمنطقة أجمع.

 

Established in 1977 under the temporary name of “Software Development Laboratories”, Oracle’s first clients were the U.S. Air Force and the CIA, forging a foundational and enduring nexus with the American military and intelligence power that has only deepened over decades. Today, Oracle is a critical technology arm of the U.S. computational, military complex, embedded in Pentagon cloud contracts and the infrastructure of major arms manufacturers, while simultaneously being a core supplier to the Israeli defense establishment, providing the database and cloud systems that support its military, intelligence agencies, and occupation infrastructure. For Lebanon, entering into a strategic cloud and AI training agreement with this company is an acute danger, as it directly partners its national data and technological future with a colonial entity that is operationally integrated with Lebanon’s primary adversary, “Israel”. This move risks embedding infrastructure that is completely answerable to the Zioamerican kleptocratic interests and technologically enmeshed with the very entity, the Israeli military, that represents an existential threat to Lebanese sovereignty and security.

 

INTRODUCTION: Oracle Timeline Summary

1970s : Founding & First Customers(U.S. Air Force & CIA)

  • 1977: Oracle was founded in June 1977 as Software Development Laboratories (SDL) by Larry Ellison, Bob Miner, and Ed Oates to commercialize relational database technology.
  • 1979: Its first customer was the U.S. Air Force at Wright‑Patterson AFB, and its first product was a relational database using SQL
  • Name Origin: The flagship database product was originally developed for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the company later adopted “Oracle” as its name (in 1982).

1980s–1990s :  Growth, IPO & Expansion

  • 1982: Company renamed itself Oracle Corporation.
  • 1986: Oracle went public (IPO) on NASDAQ.
  • Throughout the 1980s–90s, Oracle grew into one of the leading database management software providers worldwide.

2000s–2010s : Acquisitions & Diversification

  • Oracle expanded its software portfolio via major acquisitions — including PeopleSoft (2005), Siebel (2006), BEA Systems (2008), Sun Microsystems (2010), and NetSuite (2016) — broadening offerings beyond databases into applications, middleware, hardware, and cloud services.

2010s–2020s : Cloud and Government

  • Cloud Era: Oracle launched extensive cloud services and government‑focused cloud solutions supporting thousands of public sector customers worldwide.
  • 2020: Became the cloud provider for TikTok’s U.S. operations
  • 2025: Oracle shifted strongly into AI and cloud infrastructure; notably securing multibillion‑dollar deals with OpenAI and others. The deal between Oracle and OpenAI is estimated at 10+ billion USD.

U.S. Federal & Defense Contracts

Oracle has multiple major engagements with U.S. government and defense agencies, including:

  • Pentagon Cloud Contracts: Oracle was one of the companies awarded a slice of a $9billion Pentagon cloud contract (JWCC) alongside Google, AWS, and Microsoft to provide enterprise‑wide cloud services.
  • DoD & Federal Licensing: Oracle’s offerings (software, infrastructure, support) are regularly licensed by U.S. defense bodies — including contracts with the Defense Information Systems Agency and Navy license agreements historically.
  • Defense Cloud Architecture: Oracle offers Secure Cloud Computing Architecture (SCCA) and other cloud services certified for U.S. defense and national security workloads.

2025: Oracle Defense Ecosystem

In 2025 Oracle launched the Oracle Defense Ecosystem, a program to help tech firms engage more easily with government clients (especially the U.S. Department of Defense) and modernize defense technology adoption:

  • Initial members included companies like Arqit, Blackshark.ai, Entanglement, Koniku, Kraken, Mattermost, Metron, SensusQ, and Whitespace — aimed at enabling cloud‑ and AI‑enabled defense solutions.
  • A second cohort added startups and specialists such as Airis Labs, Defense Unicorns, Duality Technologies, and others focusing on cybersecurity, autonomous systems, and secure communications.

These programs reflect Oracle’s broader strategy to knit together its cloud infrastructure with defense‑oriented partners and assist them in meeting compliance (e.g., CMMC) and procurement requirements.

 

PART 1:
Key Timeline of Activities & Contracts with Oracle and the Lebanese government
(2023-2026)

2023

  • March 2023 – Support for Central Bank IT Systems
          • Bank of Lebanon (Central Bank) issued an agreement to provide support for its financial/accounting system based on Oracle technology with a contract value of 230,457.92 USD .
  • December 2023 – Technical Support Agreements with BdL
          • Bank of Lebanon (Central Bank) announced a framework agreement for general technical support services involving Oracle systems, indicating continuing use of Oracle enterprise applications with a contract value of 166,760.24 USD.

2024

  • January 2024 – Oracle E-Business Suite Support (Central Bank)
          • The Central Bank (Bank of Lebanon) secured a contract directly with Oracle for support and licensing of its Oracle E-Business Suite with a contract value of 230,457.92 USD(same contract value as 2023).
  • Late 2024 – Government-Level Oracle Support Renewals
          • Public procurement listings show Oracle Exadata support renewal tenders covering 2023–2026, reflecting ongoing institutional reliance on Oracle infrastructure.

2025

  • March 2025 – Renewed Oracle Support for Supply Chain Systems
          • The Bank of Lebanon again awarded a support and licensing agreement for Oracle Supply Chain software, demonstrating continued use of Oracle products in the public financial sector.
  • July 2025 – Oracle Licensing at Electricité du Liban
          • Electricité du Liban renewed Oracle JD Edwards application licenses for another year, showing adoption of Oracle enterprise systems beyond finance into infrastructure sectors.
  • 2025 – Major MoU that could transfer national data and its infrastructure in Lebanon to the adversarial Zionist Entity
  • December 8, 2025 – Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)
          • The Ministry of State for Technology and Artificial Intelligence signed a strategic MoU with Oracle to train 50,000 Lebanese in cloud computing, artificial intelligence (AI), and machine learning with allegedly  no cost to participants” except the cost of relinquishing national data to the Zio-American adversary…
          • This agreement has been dangerously described and promoted as the “first major strategic cooperation between the Lebanese government and a large U.S. tech company in nearly two decades”.

 

PART 2:

Key Timeline of Activities & Contracts with Oracle and the Zionist entity in Occupied Palestine
(data found for: 1990s-future)

  • Early–mid 1990s
  • Zionist government ministries & public sector
    • Oracle database software adopted by multiple Israeli government bodies as part of a “globalized” uptake of Oracle RDBMS for large-scale data management.
    • Use included civilian administration systems and early government IT modernization.
    • Cost: Not publicly disclosed
  • Mid–late 1990s
  • Israeli Ministry of Defense & military units (early adoption phase)
    • Oracle databases reportedly in use within defense-related IT environments, likely via:
      • Local integrators
      • Pilot projects
      • Department-level licenses
    • These systems laid the groundwork for later ERP and intelligence-scale deployments.
    • Cost: Not publicly disclosed
  • Late 1990s
  • Security agencies & state institutions
    • Oracle database products increasingly embedded as back-end infrastructure in:
      • Security agencies
      • Police-related systems
      • Large national data repositories
    • Cost: Not publicly disclosed
  • 2001
        • Oracle Israel awarded a 5-year ERP tender for the Ministry of Defense and Israeli military worth over 100 million shekel (≈ $27 million USD).
        • Oracle Israel signed a strategic infrastructure contract with the Ministry of Defense worth 60 million shekel (≈ $16 million USD).
  • 2003
    • Ministry of Defense purchased Oracle e-commerce software for 5 million shekel (≈ $1.35 million USD).
  • 2004
    • Oracle contracted by Israel Police for database infrastructure licenses (part of long-term contracts later totaling over 1.5 million shekel, ≈ $400,000+ USD).
  • 2006
    • Oracle Israel signed a multi-year agreement with the Ministry of Defense to supply databases and Fusion middleware worth tens of millions of USD.
    • Rotem-Reut border control system began operating on Oracle databases.
  • 2012 (February)
    • Israeli Air Force implemented Oracle Exadata database machines in a project worth over 10 million shekel (≈ $2.7 million USD).
  • 2013
    • Israeli Military Intelligence Directorate launched a new Oracle cloud-based system with an estimated scope of tens of millions of shekel (≈ $5–15+ million USD, estimated).
  • 2015
    • Oracle Israel renewed a 3-year licensing agreement with the Ministry of Defense worth 140 million shekel (≈ $38 million USD), for the sixth consecutive renewal.
  • 2018
    • Oracle hosted a two-day hackathon for Israeli military soldiers.
    • Oracle Israel hosted an innovation hackathon with the Israel Police.
  • 2021 (November)
    • Contract issued for maintenance of Oracle servers for the Israeli Civil Administration (ICA) in the occupied West Bank (value not disclosed).
  • 2022
    • Israel Police contracted Oracle Israel (sole supplier) for licenses, maintenance, and upgrades worth 880,000 shekel (≈ $238,000 USD).
    • Additional police maintenance contract worth 910,000 shekel (≈ $246,000 USD).
    • Population and Immigration Authority issued contracts to maintain Oracle licenses for border and permit systems.
  • Dec 2022 – Dec 2023
    • Oracle Israel provided licenses to the Population and Immigration Authority worth 1,258,323 shekel (≈ $340,000 USD).
  • Oct 2023 – Jun 2024
    • Ministry of Defense received Oracle support and implementation services with only a cost of 500,000 shekel (≈ $135,000 USD) being documented
  • Throughout 2023 | IOF’s genocidal operations in Gaza
    • Oracle databases and systems continued to be used by the Israeli military and intelligence bodies during the Gaza war for:
      • Intelligence data extraction
      • Operational coordination
      • Logistics and interoperability between air, land, and sea forces
    • Cost: Not publicly disclosed
      (Covered under earlier multi-year licensing agreements worth at the very least tens of millions of USD.)
  • January 2024
    • Oracle CEO met with the Israeli Prime Minister and Minister of Defense to discuss security cooperation, AI, and cloud computing.
    • Oracle donated military equipment worth ~2 million shekel (≈ $500,000+ USD) to elite Israeli military units operating in Gaza, yet the budget of the deals made with Oracle during the Netanyahu visit remains undisclosed.
  • February 2024
    • Oracle Israel hosted a hackathon for the Israeli military Computer and IT Directorate.
  • October–November 2024
    • Israeli Civil Administration issued tenders for Oracle server support and maintenance for a system used to monitor “illegal construction” in the occupied West Bank (values not disclosed).

 

✺ ✺ ✺ ✺ ✺ ✺ ✺ ✺

PART 3:

Key Timeline of Activities & Contracts with Oracle and Arms Manufacturers(based on Accessible Data)

Lockheed Martin

  • 2010s
    • Implemented Oracle ERP and cloud solutions for global supply chain and manufacturing operations.
  • 2016
    • Deployed Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) and database systems to support program management and logistics for aerospace programs.
  • 2020–2023
    • Ongoing enterprise systems modernization using Oracle Fusion Cloud Applications and database platforms.
  • Note: Oracle provides IT infrastructure supporting production, scheduling, and logistics, not weapons design.

Boeing Defense

  • 2012
    • Boeing Defense integrated Oracle E-Business Suite and databases for global supply chain management.
  • 2018
    • Adopted Oracle cloud analytics and ERP to manage aircraft maintenance, parts logistics, and operations data.
  • 2021–2023
    • Modernization projects for Boeing Defense IT infrastructure with Oracle Fusion ERP and cloud-based data platforms.

Raytheon Technologies

  • 2015
    • Oracle ERP implemented for procurement and supplier management.
  • 2019
    • Cloud migration and integration of Oracle analytics and enterprise databases for defense contracts.
  • 2022
    • Oracle cloud services support Raytheon’s operational data management and cybersecurity platforms.

General Dynamics

  • 2014
    • Oracle ERP and databases deployed for program management and logistics across U.S. and international defense projects.
  • 2017
    • Expanded use of Oracle cloud infrastructure to support manufacturing data and project tracking.
  • 2020–2023
    • Ongoing use of Oracle ERP, supply chain, and database services for U.S. and allied defense projects.

Israeli Defense Contractors

  • 1990s–2000s
    • Oracle Israel provided databases and ERP systems to support the Israeli defense establishment, including defense contractors affiliated with military R&D and logistics.
  • 2006
    • Oracle Israel signed multi-year agreements with Israeli defense-related entities to provide databases, Fusion middleware, and ERP support (exact contractor details often classified; integrated with military systems).
  • 2010s
    • Oracle’s cloud and enterprise applications extended to contractors supporting the Ministry of Defense and Israeli Air Force logistics.
  • 2020–2025
    • Ongoing deployment of Oracle ERP, cloud, and data management platforms to contractors supplying the IDF and military intelligence units.

Wide-ranging

2025

  • June 2025 | Oracle Defense Ecosystem Launch
    • Oracle formally announced the Oracle Defense Ecosystem, a global initiative to aid arms production companies(“startups and established firms”) access secure cloud and AI technologies to support military operations, intended to serve “U.S. and allied defence sectors”.
  • Mid‑2025 to 2030 | Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Expansion in Germany
    • Oracle signalled plans to invest ~$2billion over five years to expand cloud infrastructure in Germany, specifically to support local public and private sector workloads, which could include defence and regulated data customers.

 

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