South Korea and Saudi Arabia Deepen Defence Partnership with New R&D Cooperation
Seoul and Riyadh agree to expand military collaboration into research and development in a landmark strategic pact
South Korea and Saudi Arabia have agreed to significantly broaden their defence partnership by establishing formal cooperation on military research and development aimed at enhancing technological integration and strategic interoperability.
The announcement, made during official talks in Riyadh on February 22, builds on a burgeoning bilateral relationship anchored in defence, energy and economic ties as both nations pursue long-term security and industrial modernisation.
President Yoon Suk-yeol of South Korea and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman oversaw the signing of the joint defence research cooperation agreement, which is intended to facilitate collaborative projects in areas such as defence electronics, autonomous systems, advanced materials and joint weapon systems development.
Under the pact, defence ministries and national defence industries from both countries will coordinate on shared R&D programmes, exchange technical expertise and harmonise standards to support future production and procurement.
The accord signals Seoul’s expanding role as a provider of advanced defence technology in the Middle East and aligns with Riyadh’s Vision 2030 objective to diversify its defence industrial base.
The framework establishes a series of working groups that will identify priority technologies and draft detailed joint research roadmaps over the coming months.
Officials from both governments have indicated that projects could encompass artificial intelligence applications for battlefield systems, maritime domain awareness technologies and next-generation sensor suites for air and missile defence.
South Korean defence firms, including major contractors such as Hanwha and LIG Nex1, are expected to play a central role in implementing collaborative R&D, while Saudi Arabia’s defence industrial authorities will support localisation and co-production efforts.
The agreement also envisages capacity-building programmes to train engineers and researchers from both nations.
The expanded defence cooperation comes amid a broader uptick in strategic engagement between Seoul and Riyadh, reflecting shifting geopolitical dynamics in East Asia and the Middle East.
South Korea has sought to strengthen security partnerships beyond its traditional alliances, emphasising defence diplomacy and technology collaboration as key pillars of its foreign policy.
Saudi Arabia, for its part, has deepened defence ties with key partners in Europe, Asia and the United States as it continues extensive modernisation of its armed forces.
Analysts say the new R&D focus accentuates Riyadh’s intent to foster indigenous technological capabilities in critical defence sectors.
Both sides have framed the R&D cooperation as mutually beneficial, designed to bolster deterrence, create high-value industrial jobs and empower domestic defence ecosystems.
Government officials described the agreement as a forward-looking framework that complements existing procurement and training partnerships and lays the groundwork for future strategic initiatives between the two nations.