AWS and Google Cloud took an unexpected step toward easing one of the most persistent problems in multicloud operations, revealing a joint networking approach that aims to simplify how companies connect workloads across competing platforms.
The announcement, delivered during AWS re:Invent 2025 in Las Vegas, arrives at a time when organizations feel increasing pressure to keep applications stable even as global systems grow more interdependent.
The two providers introduced a framework that lets customers set up private, high-speed links between their environments with far less friction than before. AWS Interconnect Multicloud and Google Cloud’s Cross-Cloud Interconnect form the center of this effort.
Engineers involved in the project said the goal is to replace long configuration cycles with a process that can begin within minutes. To encourage broader adoption, AWS also published an open API package on GitHub, and several analysts expect Azure to join the ecosystem next year.
For years, enterprises have struggled to balance the benefits of spreading workloads across multiple clouds with the technical overhead that typically follows. Many teams built their own private networks, while others depended on public connections that often behaved inconsistently. Because of those limitations, architects spent as much time managing routes and gateways as they did building applications. The new approach gives them a fully managed path that avoids extra hardware and reduces the number of moving pieces involved in day-to-day operations.
The timing of the move coincided with a series of updates to Amazon Connect, which now focuses more heavily on agentic AI and real-time decision support. The platform adds deeper visibility into how its models reach conclusions, a feature that has become increasingly important for sectors that face strict compliance requirements. These additions reflect a broader shift toward AI-driven services that need consistent, low-latency connectivity across regions.
As interest in AI continues to rise, so does demand for predictable multicloud networking. This helps explain why the joint effort has drawn widespread attention. Companies appear less interested in isolated cloud strategies and more focused on reliable pathways that keep applications connected regardless of where they run.
