KAI drew significant attention at ADEX, held from October 17 to 24 at Seoul Air Base in Seongnam and KINTEX in Ilsan, by unveiling a model of its indigenous maritime patrol aircraft based on the large Global 6500 business jet. ROKN currently fields 21 MPAs—15 P-3C series airframes and six P-8A Poseidons but the May crash of a P-3CK and the increasing difficulty of sustaining 30-year-old airframes have sharply accelerated planning for a successor. At ADEX 2025, Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) publicly showcased its first indigenous MPA concept based on the Bombardier Global 6500, signaling a potential shift toward domestic development.
The fatal P-3CK accident near Pohang remains unresolved due to the lack of a flight data recorder and a destroyed cockpit voice recorder. Investigations using simulators, wreckage analysis, and environmental studies failed to identify any single causal factor. The joint investigation concluded the accident resulted from a “complex combination of mechanical, human, and environmental elements.” Following the loss, the Navy grounded its P-3CK fleet for inspections and introduced updated safety protocols. With seven P-3CKs remaining, the Navy will propose six replacement aircraft—judging that modern MPAs offer higher availability than legacy platforms.
Once the JCS validates the operational requirement, the next step will be determining the acquisition strategy. Two paths exist:
The most likely foreign option is additional P-8A Poseidons, leveraging existing training and logistics.
However, challenges include:
High acquisition and life-cycle cost
Limited integration flexibility for Korean sensors/unmanned systems
Dependence on U.S. export approvals
This approach mirrors recent ROKAF programs (AEW&C Block-II, electronic warfare aircraft) that used foreign commercial airframes customized with Korean mission systems.
Analysts widely expect Seoul to favor a domestic development model due to: Greater integration freedom, Lower long-term costs, Strategic autonomy Support for the Navy’s future MUM-T (manned–unmanned teaming) concept.
KAI’s selection of the Global 6500 reflects a multi-year platform evaluation process that considered Airbus A321, Boeing 737, and other business jets.
12,225 km maximum range — top-tier endurance for ASW/ISR missions
Lower operating and maintenance cost than militarized commercial transports
Short-runway performance, higher basing flexibility than the P-8A
ROKAF interoperability — already selected for AEW&C and EW aircraft
Proven in global MPA design studies (Saab Swordfish, Bombardier proposals)
Internal weapons bay for four Blue Shark lightweight torpedoes
360° maritime surveillance radar (nose & aft mounts)
Wing stations for anti-ship missiles and KGGB precision glide bombs
Integrated mission crew consoles
Sonobuoy launchers for ASW operations
KAI’s model underscores that most key technologies—sensors, mission systems, weapons—are already fully domestic and fielded.
On Nov. 17, Sonatech announced successful localization of a multi-static LFA sonobuoy system, making Korea only the third nation after the U.S. and U.K. to field such capability. Key effects include: Dramatically larger submarine detection radius, Networked operations linking ships, submarines, and aircraft, Active–passive combined buoy operations (1 active + 4 passive units)
Indigenous Torpedoes Already Operational
The Korean Blue Shark torpedo: 12 km range, 500–600 m depth, Operational on ROKN helicopters & P-3Cs, Exported to the Philippines. This domestic weapons inventory simplifies integration for a Korean-developed MPA.
ROKN’s long-term maritime strategy centers on Navy Sea Ghost, an AI-enabled, fully integrated manned–unmanned maritime combat architecture combining: Surface combatants, Submarines, USVs, UUVs, Maritime UAVs. MPA as the airborne command node For Sea Ghost to function, platforms must be able to integrate with Korean-developed unmanned systems at the mission-system level.
OEM approval required
Foreign government export clearance
Higher integration cost
Limited access to core mission system interfaces
Domestic development offers: Total control over mission architecture, Seamless integration with Korea’s ASW and unmanned systems, Future-proof upgrades without foreign restrictions.
Outlook — Momentum Shifting Toward a Korean-Built MPA
Replacing the entire P-3C fleet could require 10+ aircraft, offering strong economies of scale for domestic production. With: rowing emphasis on unmanned teaming, The need for autonomous integration authority, Mature indigenous ASW technologies, A strong industrial base, Lower life-cycle cost. The case for a Korean-developed Global 6500 MPA grows stronger by the month. Most defense analysts, including ROKN insiders, expect the indigenous path to win out over additional P-8A procurement—aligning with Seoul’s long-term strategic, operational, and industrial priorities.
K-DEFENSE NEWS | Strategic Analysis Desk