South Korea to acquire long-range suicide drone system
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- South Korea's Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back announced plans to introduce a long-range suicide drone system, a "Korean version" of the U.S.
- Lucas, to bolster unmanned weapons capabilities amid evolving warfare.
- The Lucas system is reportedly reverse-engineered from Iranian Shahed-136 drones used in the Middle East.
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South Korea's Defense Minister announced plans to introduce long-range suicide drones to enhance unmanned weapons systems, adapting to a changing warfare environment where drones are increasingly impactful.
By Kim Seung-yeon
SEOUL, June 26 (Yonhap) -- South Korea will push to bring in a long-range suicide drone system for combat use to bolster its unmanned weapons systems amid a changing warfare environment, Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back said Friday.
The plan calls for accelerating efforts to field long-range self-destructive loitering munitions as part of the country's broader drone and counter-drone policy to adapt to changes on the battlefield where the use of drones is increasingly becoming a game changer.
The suicide drones will be the Korean version of the U.S. Lucas, or low-cost uncrewed combat attack system, the defense ministry said.
The Lucas system is known to be reverse-engineered from Iranian Shahed-136 drones, a key weapon used in the recent Middle East conflict.
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South Korea will accelerate efforts to field long-range self-destructive loitering munitions.
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Offene Fragen
- What are the specific technical specifications of the 'Korean version' of Lucas?
- What is the estimated cost of this system?
- What is the timeline for deployment?







