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Cheongung-III

South Korea's next-generation mid-range surface-to-air missile system; LIG Nex1 won the $2.2B development contract; defended footprint 4x larger than Cheongung-II.

Last refreshed: 21 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Can one Cheongung-III battery really cover four times the ground its predecessor could — and is 2034 soon enough?

Timeline for Cheongung-III

#91 May

Awarded to LIG Nex1 at ~$2.2B contract for mid-range air defence with 4x Cheongung-II footprint

Drones: Industry & Defence: South Korea pulls Iron Dome forward to 2029
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Common Questions
What is the Cheongung-III and how is it different from Cheongung-II?
Cheongung-III is South Korea's next-generation mid-range SAM system with a defended footprint four times larger than Cheongung-II. LIG Nex1 won the ~$2.2B ECS contract; Hanwha retains radar and launcher roles. Development completes 2034.Source: KED Global, Army Recognition
Why did LIG Nex1 beat Hanwha for the Cheongung-III contract?
LIG Nex1 outscored Hanwha by 0.1 evaluation points in the DAPA assessment. Both companies split responsibilities: LIG Nex1 leads the engagement control system while Hanwha retains radar and launcher development.Source: KED Global
How has the Cheongung missile system performed in real combat?
Cheongung-II batteries operated by the UAE intercepted Iranian strikes during the 2026 Iran-Gulf conflict, validating the system's combat effectiveness and driving strong export demand for the Cheongung family.Source: KED Global

Background

Cheongung-III (M-SAM III) is South Korea's next-generation medium-altitude surface-to-air missile system, replacing the current Cheongung-II in the mid-tier of the Korea Air and Missile Defense (KAMD) architecture. In a contract award announced in May 2026, LIG Nex1 edged out Hanwha by a 0.1-point margin in the Defence Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) evaluation to lead the approximately ₩3 trillion (~$2.2 billion) development programme. LIG Nex1 won the engagement control system (ECS) — the command-and-control unit that determines when and how to intercept. Hanwha Systems and Hanwha Aerospace, who built the Cheongung-II radar and launcher, will retain those roles in Cheongung-III.

Cheongung-III's defining capability is a defended footprint four times larger than Cheongung-II, enabling fewer batteries to cover the same geographic area. The system targets Ballistic Missiles and advanced aircraft at ranges and altitudes above LAMD and below THAAD. Development is scheduled for completion by 2034, after which the system enters KAMD service as the mid-tier layer. The ₩3 trillion programme is one of the largest defence contracts in recent Korean history; LIG Nex1 also separately secured a $2.78 billion deal to supply Iraq with Cheongung-II in 2024, demonstrating strong export demand for the family.

Cheongung-III's significance spans the drone and defence-industrial beat but will be central to any Korea-specific topic covering the peninsula's evolving air-defence architecture. The competition between LIG Nex1 and Hanwha — two of Korea's largest defence primes — also signals the increasing maturity and competitiveness of South Korea's domestic defence industry.

Source Material