AI war jolts Seoul into bipartisan push for defense chips

By Lee Jung-woo Posted : March 19, 2026, 16:26 Updated : March 19, 2026, 16:26
An Israeli military helicopter firing a missile toward targets in Lebanon, seen from the upper Galilee on the Israel-Lebanon border, Mar. 18, 2026. EPA-Yonhap
SEOUL, March 19 (AJP) - The U.S.-Israel war on Iran — increasingly described as the world’s first “AI war” — is forcing South Korea to confront a critical vulnerability: its heavy reliance on foreign semiconductors in defense systems.

Both Washington and Tel Aviv have confirmed deploying a “variety” of artificial intelligence tools in combat, from targeting systems to leadership strikes. The conflict has underscored how modern warfare is rapidly evolving into a data- and chip-driven domain — and how exposed countries can be without secure supply chains.

The reality check has trigged an unusually bipartisan flurry among lawmakers. 

Lawmakers from both the ruling and opposition parties are reviving long-delayed efforts to foster a domestic defense semiconductor industry, aiming to reduce reliance on imports and build self-reliant military capabilities.

Microchips already sit at the core of modern weapons systems — from fighter jets and naval vessels to missiles, radar and satellites. Yet South Korea sources nearly all of them from abroad. Internal estimates show that about 98.9 percent of semiconductors used in Korean defense systems are imported, leaving the country acutely vulnerable to external disruptions.

That dependency stands in stark contrast to South Korea’s global leadership in memory chips, led by Samsung Electronics and SK hynix. The gap lies in system semiconductors — the logic chips essential for defense applications, where Korea still lags global leaders.
 
HBM4 and HBM4E on display at Samsung Electronics’ 57th annual general shareholders’ meeting, held at the Suwon Convention Center in Gyeonggi Province on Mar. 18, 2026. Yonhap
Rep. Lee Un-ju, a Supreme Council member of the ruling Democratic Party, on Wednesday introduced a sweeping bill aimed at fostering a domestic defense semiconductor industry and stabilizing supply chains increasingly strained by geopolitical rivalry.

Her proposal, titled the Special Act on the Promotion of the Defense Semiconductor Industry and Supply Chain Stabilization, frames semiconductors not merely as industrial goods but as strategic security assets.

The bill calls for the creation of a Defense Semiconductor Promotion Committee under the Ministry of National Defense to assess industrial competitiveness and supply chain vulnerabilities, while building a centralized information management system.

It also outlines state-backed support across the semiconductor value chain — from materials and fabrication to packaging and design — along with preferential procurement policies for domestically produced defense chips.

A key focus is strengthening system semiconductors, which require far higher levels of reliability and resilience than commercial chips and underpin communications systems, radar, satellites and missile platforms.

“By building a stable supply chain and fostering a domestic ecosystem, we can strengthen the foundation of self-reliant defense and contribute to economic growth,” Lee said, calling for bipartisan cooperation.
 
The Special Act on Investment in the United States is being passed with bipartisan support during the first plenary session of the March extraordinary National Assembly held at the National Assembly on Mar. 12, 2026. Yonhap
A similar effort had already been underway. Rep. Sung Il-jong of the ruling People Power Party, who chairs the National Assembly’s Defense Committee, introduced related legislation in February 2025, reflecting a growing sense of urgency.

“Nearly 99 percent of defense semiconductors used in South Korean weapons systems are imported,” Sung told AJP. “Our sovereign weapons systems, including missiles, depend on semiconductor sovereignty.”

His proposal emphasizes building a full domestic ecosystem — from design and fabrication to packaging and maintenance — while prioritizing locally developed chips in defense procurement and strengthening safeguards against technology leakage.

The push is also shaped by shifting U.S. policy. The U.S. Department of Defense is moving to phase out Chinese components from its weapons systems, with plans to exclude them from general-purpose semiconductors by 2027 and eliminate them entirely from existing programs by 2031.
 
US President Donald J. Trump (L) speaks with Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth (C) and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Dan Caine (R) before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, USA, Mar. 18, 2026. EPA-Yonhap
The effort spans the entire defense industrial base, from critical minerals to communications and navigation systems.

For allies such as South Korea and Japan, the implications are immediate. Washington is increasingly urging partners to align their supply chains, effectively redrawing the boundaries of acceptable sourcing.

The private sector is beginning to respond. The Defense Acquisition Program Administration has been pursuing defense semiconductor initiatives since 2023, including efforts to cultivate AI-specialized personnel.

Hanwha Systems has launched joint research programs with Seoul National University and Sungkyunkwan University to localize key technologies. The company aims to develop high-frequency communication chips by 2031 and is working on domestically produced high-power, wideband semiconductors for radar systems.

Still, the economics remain a major hurdle. Unlike commercial semiconductors, which benefit from massive economies of scale, defense chips are typically produced in small volumes with highly specialized specifications.

That makes them less attractive to private firms without sustained government support — a gap the proposed legislation seeks to address through subsidies, workforce development and measures to prevent technology leakage.

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