South Korea Plans AI, Drone Deployment For Minefield Breach

South Korea plans to deploy AI, drones to breach enemy minefields.

What does the battlefield of the future actually look like?

In Yangpyeong, it’s already taking shape — and humans aren’t leading the charge.

Picture this: drones buzzing overhead, streaming live footage of enemy positions.

On the ground, robotic dogs and bomb-disposal machines move first, scanning for landmines.

Only then do soldiers and armoured vehicles begin to advance. Sounds like science fiction, right? Not anymore.

During a high-tech military drill, South Korea showcased how artificial intelligence and unmanned systems could redefine combat.

An AI-powered weapon system tracked targets, while the Korean Combat Engineer Vehicle (K-CEV) cleared a safe path through dangerous terrain.

Rise Of Unmanned Warfare

Why the shift? Fewer soldiers. More complex threats.

“Unmanned systems reduce risk and speed up operations,” a military official explained — a simple idea with huge implications.

Built on the K21 vehicle platform, the K-CEV can carry troops, navigate tough environments, and even operate remotely — at least within range.

It’s not fully autonomous yet, but it’s getting there.

The big question is hard to ignore: if machines take the front line, what happens to the role of human soldiers?

One thing’s clear — the future of war isn’t coming. It’s already here, quietly rolling forward on metal tracks.

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