South Korea deploys anti-drone nets on frontline armored units

Key Points
  • South Korea fielded anti-drone protective nets on K2 Black Panther tanks and K21 infantry fighting vehicles during a January 2026 force-on-force exercise with the ROK Army’s 8th Maneuver Division.
  • The move reflects lessons drawn from the war in Ukraine and signals a shift toward standardizing low-cost passive defenses against FPV and loitering munition threats on frontline armored units.

South Korea has begun fielding anti-drone protective nets on frontline armored vehicles after publishing official photos showing K2 Black Panther main battle tanks and K21 infantry fighting vehicles fitted with lightweight foldable screens during a January 2026 force-on-force exercise.

The images, released following training by the ROK Army’s 8th Maneuver Division, show both platforms operating with cage-style protection over turrets and upper hull areas. The measures are designed to reduce vulnerability to low-cost loitering munitions and first-person-view strike drones, a threat the South Korean military has assessed closely after studying combat lessons from the war in Ukraine.

As part of the exercise, the modified K2 and K21 vehicles maneuvered in simulated high-intensity combat scenarios, indicating that the anti-drone nets are being treated as standard operational equipment rather than ad-hoc battlefield modifications.

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According to South Korean military sources, the protective screens are designed to be lightweight, collapsible, and quickly installable, allowing armored crews to deploy them without major changes to vehicle structure or mobility. The systems focus on defeating top-attack drones by triggering premature detonation or disrupting guidance, rather than providing heavy armor protection.

The move reflects a broader reassessment of armored warfare by South Korea as inexpensive aerial threats proliferate. Ukrainian battlefield experience has shown that even advanced tanks and infantry fighting vehicles remain exposed to small drones carrying shaped charges or improvised munitions, often striking from above where armor is thinner.

The K2 Black Panther, South Korea’s primary main battle tank, is known for its advanced fire-control system, composite armor, and mobility, while the K21 serves as the backbone of mechanized infantry units. Both platforms were originally designed to counter conventional anti-tank weapons, not mass drone attacks, prompting the ROK Army to adapt rapidly.

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