South Korea unveils new supersonic anti-ship missile

Key Points
  • South Korea displayed the Haeseong-5 supersonic anti-ship missile during the launch of the Changbogo-III Batch-II submarine ROKS Jang Young-sil.
  • The missile is launched from a 10-cell vertical system and is believed to be based on Russian Yakhont technology.

On Oct. 22, the Republic of Korea Navy and the Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) unveiled the first Changbogo-III Batch-II class submarine, the Jang Yeong-sil (SS-087), at Hanwha Ocean’s Geoje Shipyard, and displayed the Haeseong‑5 anti‑ship missile as a central part of the ceremony.

The missile, shown alongside the new submarine, is presented as a supersonic, mid‑range cruise and anti‑ship weapon that officials link to technology derived from the Russian Yakhont family.

The Haeseong‑5 was shown in the context of the submarine’s mid‑aft 10‑cell ULS‑07K vertical launch system, indicating an internal launch option for the platform’s strike loadout.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

According to the open source material, the missile is a supersonic universal anti‑ship weapon intended to engage surface warships and single ships under heavy fire and electronic countermeasures; the same sources say it can also be used against land targets and that its engagement range can be increased for such missions.

The design described for Haeseong‑5 follows a conventional aerodynamic layout and uses a solid‑fuel booster placed inside the combustion chamber of a ramjet engine. The booster burns to accelerate the missile; once the booster stage completes, it separates under the oncoming airflow, allowing the ramjet to operate in sustained cruise. That propulsion arrangement is consistent with other supersonic cruise designs that combine a short‑burn solid motor for launch with an air‑breathing second stage for high‑speed cruise.

Photo by Mason Yonhak

The public display of Haeseong‑5 on a Changbogo-III Batch-II class submarine underscores Seoul’s emphasis on putting more strike options aboard its next‑generation submarines. The Changbogo-III Batch-II class is intended to expand the Republic of Korea Navy’s undersea strike and deterrent posture by increasing missile payloads and onboard systems integration compared with previous batches. The presence of a 10‑cell ULS‑07K launcher on the mid‑aft deck signals that the platform can carry a mix of anti‑ship and land‑attack munitions without relying solely on torpedo tubes.

From a technical perspective, combining a solid booster with a ramjet offers distinct operational trade‑offs. The booster provides rapid acceleration and initial launch energy, while the ramjet can sustain supersonic cruise at altitude or near sea level. That profile can complicate interception and may place different demands on warning and engagement chains for regional defenses. The use of a vertical launch system on a submarine, rather than winged or tube‑launched designs alone, changes how commanders may plan loadouts and employment.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

South Korea’s bunker-busting cruise missile passes first flight test

South Korea successfully completed a technical flight test of its domestically developed long-range air-to-ground missile Cheonryong on June 25, 2026, following two consecutive failures...

Seoul protests China-Russia aircraft entering its air defense zone

South Korean Air Force fighters scrambled on June 27, 2026, after nearly 10 Chinese and Russian military aircraft successively entered and exited the Korea...

South Korea’s missile shield is home — but are the missiles with it?

All six truck-mounted launchers belonging to the U.S. Army's only THAAD battery in South Korea have returned to their home base in Seongju County,...

S&P gives South Korea’s top arms maker an A- rating

A South Korean defense company that was barely known outside Asia a decade ago has received the kind of financial endorsement that opens doors...

South Korea and France join forces on long-range missiles

Hanwha Aerospace, the South Korean defense giant behind one of the most combat-credible rocket artillery systems currently in service, signed a Memorandum of Understanding...