Off the wire
Spotlight: U.S. Fed chair evasive about rate hike timing  • Smell of death hits Australia's Great Barrier Reef: WWF  • Tokyo stocks close higher as Fed speech sends Wall Street higher, soft yen adds support  • Bangladesh gets 2nd Confucius Institute at prestigious University of Dhaka  • Spotlight: Ex-banker Kuczynski narrowly leads in tight Peruvian presidential race  • Philippine inflation up to 1.6 pct in May  • News Analysis: Rising crime by U.S. servicepeople in Okinawa bolsters anti-base relocation moves, SOFA review push  • Wildfires continue to rage in Russia's Far East  • Chinese shares close mixed Tuesday  • Russia holds national tank biathlon in Chelyabinsk region  
You are here:   Home

S. Korea to mass-produce indigenous armored vehicles for infantry troops

Xinhua, June 7, 2016 Adjust font size:

South Korea's arms procurement agency said Tuesday that it will mass-produce indigenous armored vehicles from this month, aiming at improving mobility and operability of infantry troops.

The project to develop indigenous wheeled armored combat vehicles, which was launched in December 2012, passed the final operability test on May 9, according to the Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA). Local defense company Hyundai Rotem had undertaken the project.

Mass-production of the new combat vehicles would start this month, planning to produce about 600 units by 2023. The vehicles would be deployed in both frontline and rear army units from next year.

Major armored vehicles, operated currently by South Korea's military, such as K200 and K21, are tracked combat vehicles that have a relatively low mobility compared with the newly developed wheeled armored vehicles.

The new vehicles, including K808 and K806, can drive at a maximum speed of 100 km per hour, faster than 74 km for K200 and 70 km for K21.

The K808 was designed for fast transport of infantry troops and reconnaissance missions in mountainous frontline areas, while the K806 would be used for strikes on the move and reconnaissance missions.

The agency said that the new wheeled armored vehicles can move on the ground and in waters while carrying heavy firepower, protecting infantry troops from enemy machine gun attacks while transporting them.

It has an eye to export the newly developed vehicles thanks to price competitiveness compared with similar vehicles developed in the United States, Germany and the Netherlands, the agency said. Endit