South Korea’s defense ministry is in talks with Hyundai Motor to deploy robots in frontline support roles as Seoul shifts toward AI-based unmanned systems to address troop shortages and North Korean military threats, according to Bloomberg.
The ministry is weighing multiple robotic platforms for surveillance, reconnaissance, and logistics roles, according to the report. The systems being evaluated include Boston Dynamics Spot, Hyundai’s MobED droid, and the X-ble Shoulder exoskeleton. The ministry stated that details of the talks are not final.
South Korea’s standing force has declined 20% over six years to 450,000 personnel due to a record-low birth rate, according to the source. The defense ministry expects this number to drop further to 350,000 by 2040, creating a structural driver for the shift toward unmanned systems.
The Hyundai discussions fit within Seoul’s wider pivot away from troop-heavy forces. South Korea’s Defense Acquisition Program Administration has opened a 49.6 billion won (US$36.56 million) tender for multipurpose unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs), with Hyundai Rotem and Hanwha Aerospace leading the field, according to the report.
The government also plans to purchase approximately 11,000 commercial drones for training under its “500,000 drone warrior” project. However, the effort has encountered setbacks: the defense ministry recently paused spending on a separate small reconnaissance-drone program following complaints about performance, including excessive noise.
A military partnership with Hyundai could provide the company with a home-market testing ground amid emerging geopolitical divisions in global robotics. The U.S. is considering the American Security Robotics Act, which would block federal purchases of robotic systems made in countries Washington views as hostile, including China, according to the source.
Hyundai Motor is developing a humanoid-robot supply chain and pursuing a US-based production plant with planned annual capacity of 30,000 units by 2028. Reliable performance in non-combat roles such as logistics, surveillance, and reconnaissance could accelerate broader adoption of robots initially designed for civilian and industrial applications.
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