South Korea approves plan to buy U.S. SM-6 naval interceptors for deployment by 2034
The Facts
- South Korea finalized a plan to acquire U.S. Standard Missile-6 (SM-6) shipborne missile interceptors for deployment by 2034.
- The plan was approved by the Defense Project Promotion Committee under the Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA).
- The approved project is valued at 530 billion won, or about $351.5 million, and covers the SM-6 interceptors and related equipment.
- South Korean reports say the missiles are intended for the Navy’s Aegis destroyers.
- The government said the purchase is meant to strengthen South Korea’s missile defense capabilities.
- Multiple reports describe the SM-6 as a long-range naval interceptor that can engage a range of threats, including aircraft and cruise missiles; some reports also say it can counter ballistic missile threats.
- The approval finalizes South Korea’s procurement plan, but the missiles are scheduled to be fielded over time through 2034 rather than immediately.
How left and right are reading this
- Both agree
- A finalized, long-horizon investment in SM-6 interceptors for Aegis destroyers commits substantial public resources to expanding South Korea’s naval missile defense against multiple threats, with deployment unfolding through 2034 rather than arriving as an immediate capability.
- They split on
- Less a disagreement than a question of emphasis: the scale and opportunity cost of concentrating public resources in military systems, versus the value of turning sovereign defense priorities into a concrete long-term procurement plan.
Context
What is the SM-6?
The SM-6 is a U.S.-made shipborne interceptor for warships. Reports describe it as a long-range surface-to-air missile that can track targets with its own radar and engage threats such as aircraft and cruise missiles, with some reports also saying it can intercept certain ballistic missile threats Yonhap News Agency,UPI,조선일보.
Which South Korean forces are expected to use these missiles?
The missiles are intended for South Korea’s Navy Aegis destroyers, according to multiple reports. One report says they are for KDX-III Aegis destroyers, while others say they will equip Aegis destroyers in the fleet Defence Blog,Korea Herald,KBS WORLD Radio.
What remains unresolved?
The reports confirm the approval, budget and target deployment timeline through 2034, but they do not provide a detailed delivery schedule or the exact number of missiles to be procured Yonhap News Agency,UPI,KBS WORLD Radio.
View all 13 sources
Wire services (2)
Independent coverage (11)
About these frames
See this differently than someone you know would? Two ways to keep it going.
The dial works on any URL — paste an article you read elsewhere this week.