[Green Economy News = Reporter Choi Seong]

Artificial intelligence (AI) is driving innovation across industries and is rapidly reshaping the battlefield in defense. AI has moved beyond support roles in data analysis to lead in target identification, tactical decision-making and weapons-system operation. That shift is ushering in an “intelligent battlefield” era and quickly rearranging the global defense market.
In modern war, the speed of information processing increasingly determines outcomes. Human commanders face physical limits in parsing massive sensor feeds and making timely decisions. AI is the critical tool to relieve that bottleneck and enable faster, more accurate responses.
Automation of the “kill chain” is moving from concept to reality. When AI handles everything from target detection through strike execution, response times can shrink from minutes to seconds. That speed is essential to counter threats that exceed human reaction times, such as hypersonic missiles and drone swarms.
As a result, market leadership is shifting from traditional hardware makers to companies with strong software and data-integration capabilities. Palantir supports military decision-making with large-scale data platforms, while Anduril is pushing into next-generation autonomous surveillance and unmanned defense systems. Established primes like Lockheed Martin are also investing heavily in AI-driven integrated combat systems.
Those changes are influencing capital markets. AI-driven defense products are software-centric, which allows continuous updates and subscription-style revenue models that can deliver steadier income. Civilian firms with strengths in data analytics, cloud services and autonomous systems are finding new opportunities in defense procurement.
Competition among nations is intensifying. The U.S. Department of Defense has designated AI a core asset for future battlefields and substantially increased related funding. China, under its “civil-military fusion” strategy, is accelerating the development of AI-enabled weapons systems. At home, companies such as Hanwha Systems and LIG D&A are actively developing AI-based command-and-control and manned-unmanned integrated systems.
But technological advances raise urgent ethical and security questions. The prospect of lethal autonomous weapon systems (LAWS) that make kill decisions without human intervention alarms the international community. Officials and experts also warn of risks from system failures, unintended behavior and hostile cyber intrusions.
Patrick Wilcken of Amnesty International warned, “U.S. military authorities are adopting AI to accelerate processes such as target identification. But handing life-and-death decisions to machines creates serious ethical and human-rights risks.”
Ultimately, future battlefield success will hinge less on raw firepower than on how quickly forces can interpret data in real time and how intelligently they control the battlespace. AI is no longer optional; it is a strategic necessity. Nations and companies that secure robust AI capabilities stand to dominate the global defense market and shape future security dynamics.
A military official said, “We judge that visible automation of our kill chain will help neutralize North Korea’s mobile strategic assets and contribute to narrowing the intelligence gap between South Korea and the United States.”











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