The rise of South Korea’s weapons business

(politico.com)

30 points | by JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago ago

9 comments

  • tristanj 11 minutes ago

    This article uses so many words to focus on the political reasons, but completely ignores the primary driver: Cost.

    Korean weapons systems are 40-60% cheaper than their American counterparts.

    The Korean K9 Thunder 155mm self-propelled howitzer costs $3.5 to $4 million per unit. For comparison, the American M109A7 Paladin costs around $8 million. The German PzH 2000 runs approximately $7 to $8 million.

    The K239 Chunmoo Rocket Artillery (MLRS) system runs $2.0M/unit; M142 HIMARS runs $4.5M/unit. 155mm artillery shells are $2k/shell from Korea vs $3.5k/shell from the United States. Korean Cheongung II SAM interceptors cost ~$1.1M/unit, US Patriot missiles cost $4.0M/unit.

    Buying South Korean weapons systems means you can procure twice as much at the same cost. It's a no brainer why Korea is winning military contracts.

    [0] https://militarymachine.com/k9-thunder-howitzer-most-exporte...

  • kwillets 42 minutes ago

    This trend has been obvious since at least the Poland deal. Korea gets much more return on its defense dollar manufacturing exportable weapons systems than relying on imports or domestic-only programs.

  • Animats 43 minutes ago

    Other countries with rising weapons businesses are Ukraine and Iran.

    The best endorsement for a weapons manufacturer is winning a war against a tough opponent.

    • jonnybgood 19 minutes ago

      It’s just Russia using Iranian drones, but that was already happening.

      The attacks on Iran are not really an endorsement of Iranian weapons. The US didn’t stop its offensive because of Iranian weapons. We already knew the effectiveness of one way attack drones just from looking at their employment in Ukraine.

      The US counter-UAV industry might start seeing some exponential growth. There’s a lot of lessons learned for the US and we’ll probably start seeing a lot more money thrown around by the US military.

  • bell-cot 8 hours ago

    Maybe HN should ban words matching "surpris" from Titles?

    Even if you are clueless about the international arms trade - South Korea has maintained a huge military for the past 70-ish years, as part of their endless cold war with North Korea. And South Korea has been really big on manufacturing and exporting all sorts of stuff for the past half-ish-century. Why the hell wouldn't they be selling the military things that they are building anyway, at scale, to any and every non-enemy with money to spend?

    • tartoran an hour ago

      I don’t know what your point really is. Yes Korea has been already selling arms, but as of recently, they stepped up drastically. This is what this article is about. Is the title wrong? That’s an issue with most titles these days

    • nine_k 35 minutes ago

      There are, sadly, many places of conflicts smoldering for years; not all of them, if any, ended up in production of exportable weapons. E.g. Taiwan is preparing for a PRC invasion for decades; did it produce exportable weapons systems?

      So there is an element of surprise. Maybe not as large as North Korea exporting ballistic missiles to Russia [1], but still.

      [1]: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/apr/25/how-north-kore...

    • dredmorbius 4 hours ago

      Email suggestions (specific submission title edits, general edit-rewriting rules) to the mods: hn@ycombinator.com.

      HN guidelines typically prefer sourcing a title from the text of the document itself. Given Politico seem to be rotating through clickbait variants (the presently displayed title is "Trump Is Tired of Arming Allies. This Country Is Stepping Up.", the submitted title appears elsewhere in the page source), I'd suggest:

      "The rise of South Korea’s weapons business"

      Which is non-clickbaity, succinct, clear, and accurate. It appears at the start of the 4th body 'graph.

      I'd argue it's superior to the subtitle "The U.S. retreat from the global stage is an opportunity for South Korea.", as that option fails to indicate the nature of that opportunity. South Korea and arms trade are the key elements discussed.

      • dang 2 hours ago

        Ok, we've put that in the title above. Thanks!