National Security & Korean Peninsula Briefing: Ukraine Drone Tactics, South Korea's 20,000-Drone Plan, and Indo-Pacific Tensions
A wide-ranging security digest published by Arizona State University's Small Wars Journal covers Ukraine's SBU drone strike on a Russian oil pumping station, South Korea's plan to procure 20,000 low-cost drones and accelerate its 'K-Lucas' loitering munition, Chinese and Russian military aircraft briefly entering South Korea's ADIZ, and broader Indo-Pacific and Korean Peninsula dynamics including North Korea's alleged tunnel-technology sale to Iran for $25 million.

Highlights
- South Korea announced a plan to procure 20,000 low-cost drones while accelerating development of the 'K-Lucas' domestic loitering munition to enhance asymmetric warfare capabilities.
- Ukraine's SBU drone units struck a Russian oil pumping station supplying Moscow, demonstrating drones' long-range precision strike potential deep inside enemy territory.
- South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff confirmed nearly 10 Chinese and Russian military aircraft briefly entered South Korea's Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) in a recent incident.
- A former diplomat disclosed that North Korea sold underground tunnel engineering technology to Iran for approximately $25 million.
- Analysts argue that replicating Ukraine's successful drone warfare model requires fundamental military organizational culture change, not just technology adoption.
National Security & Korean Peninsula Briefing — June 27, 2026
Published by the Small Wars Journal, Arizona State University
Top National Security Stories
1. Can the U.S. Military Preserve Decades of Combat Experience? The U.S. armed forces are grappling with how to systematically transfer hard-won operational knowledge before battle-experienced personnel retire, raising concern that irreplaceable institutional memory may be lost.
2. Middle East Conflict Widens: Tankers Attacked Near Bahrain and the Strait of Hormuz Regional tensions are escalating as attacks on oil tankers extend to the waters near Bahrain and the Strait of Hormuz, posing a growing threat to global energy supply chains.
3. Ukraine's Strikes on Crimea Turn Putin's Strategic Asset Into a Liability Precision Ukrainian strikes have steadily degraded Crimea's value as a Russian strategic stronghold, transforming the peninsula from a prized asset into a costly burden.
4. Commentary: Senate Makes Progress on Low-Cost Munitions The U.S. Senate has taken a meaningful step toward reforming defense procurement by advancing legislation aimed at acquiring lower-cost weapons systems at scale.
5. Report: Pentagon Research Infrastructure Is 'Deteriorating' A new study warns that the Department of Defense's research and development infrastructure is in systemic decline, fueling concerns about the long-term sustainability of U.S. technological superiority.
6. Replicating Ukraine's Drone Success Requires Cultural Change First Ukraine's battlefield drone performance is not merely a technological achievement—analysts argue that genuinely replicating it demands a fundamental shift in military organizational culture.
7. U.S. Counterterrorism Aircraft Could Play a Surprising Role in a Taiwan Conflict Analysts suggest that U.S. aircraft currently employed in counterterrorism missions could prove unexpectedly valuable in a hypothetical Taiwan Strait conflict scenario.
8. U.S. Navy Maintenance Gap Could Cost America the Pacific Serious shortfalls in U.S. Navy ship maintenance and logistics readiness are being identified as a potential strategic vulnerability in the Pacific competition with China.
9. China Probes Philippines at Scarborough Shoal; Manila Seeks Partners Beyond the U.S. Beijing continues to test Manila's resolve at Scarborough Shoal (Huangyan Island), while the Philippines actively broadens its alliance network to offset the pressure.
10. Think Tank: U.S. Shifts South China Sea Reconnaissance Toward Drones and the Philippines A think tank analysis indicates the United States is transitioning its South China Sea intelligence-gathering operations to rely more heavily on drone systems and the Philippine partnership.
11. Trump-Iran Deal Seen as Economic Lifeline for Tehran Analysts characterize the agreement reached between the Trump administration and Iran as providing the Tehran leadership with critical economic support for post-conflict reconstruction.
12. China's Military Anti-Corruption Drive Deepens: Six More PLA Generals Expelled Beijing's military anti-corruption campaign continues to accelerate, with six additional senior People's Liberation Army (PLA) generals removed from the National People's Congress.
13. Would Claude Refuse an Illegal Military Order? An examination of the ethical boundaries of AI in military decision-making, exploring whether large language models possess the capacity to refuse unlawful commands.
14. Ukraine's SBU Drones Strike Russian Oil Pumping Station Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) drone units successfully struck an oil pumping station inside Russia that supplies Moscow, once again demonstrating the long-range strike capability of drone warfare.
15. SOCOM Awards Its Highest Honor to a Navy SEAL for the First Time U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) has presented its highest decoration to a Navy SEAL for the first time in the command's history.
Korean Peninsula Highlights
1. Risks to South Korea in Victor Cha's 'Cold Peace' Proposal A high-profile scholar's "Cold Peace" concept is generating controversy in Seoul, with critics arguing the framework could expose South Korea to unacceptable security risks.
2. China Emphasizes Dialogue After South Korea Flags Illegal Fishing Following Seoul's protest over illegal fishing by Chinese vessels, Beijing has called for the dispute to be resolved through diplomatic channels.
3. JCS: Nearly 10 Chinese and Russian Military Aircraft Briefly Enter South Korea's ADIZ South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) confirmed that close to ten Chinese and Russian military aircraft briefly penetrated South Korea's Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) in a recent incident.
4. Ex-Diplomat: North Korea Earned $25 Million Selling Tunnel Technology to Iran A former diplomat has disclosed that North Korea transferred underground tunnel engineering technology to Iran in exchange for approximately $25 million.
5. South Korean Forum Calls for Faster DMZ Mine Clearance A forum held in South Korea urged stakeholders to expand the scope and pace of landmine clearance operations along the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
6. Japanese Defense Minister Visits Seoul to Deepen Security Cooperation Japan's Defense Minister traveled to Seoul for talks focused on strengthening bilateral security cooperation and joint defense coordination.
7. South Korean Ambassador: Korean War Veterans' Sacrifice Remains the Foundation of the Alliance South Korea's ambassador to the United States stated at a commemorative event that the sacrifice of Korean War veterans continues to be the enduring spiritual cornerstone of the ROK-U.S. alliance.
8. South Korea Plans to Procure 20,000 Low-Cost Drones and Accelerate 'K-Lucas' Loitering Munition Seoul has announced plans to procure 20,000 low-cost drones while fast-tracking development of its domestically designed loitering munition, known as "K-Lucas," significantly bolstering asymmetric warfare capabilities.
9. What Lee Jae-myung's Selective Service Plan Means for South Korea's Shrinking Military Analysts are examining the implications of President Lee Jae-myung's proposed selective conscription reforms for an armed forces already strained by demographic decline.
10. Ballot Shortage Protests Enter Day 23 Domestic demonstrations in South Korea over disputed ballot shortages have continued for a 23rd consecutive day, sustaining political tensions.
11. Former PM Kishida: North Korea Complicates Nuclear Disarmament Former Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has stated that North Korea's ongoing nuclear development presents a serious challenge to global disarmament negotiations.
12. Lee Jae-myung Sets 2030 Target to Cultivate a Korean Palantir President Lee Jae-myung has declared a goal of nurturing a South Korean security-technology company comparable to U.S. firm Palantir by 2030.
13. South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Attends Pax Silica Summit in Washington on AI and Chip Supply Chains South Korea's Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs participated in the Pax Silica Summit in Washington, D.C., engaging in multilateral discussions on artificial intelligence development and semiconductor supply chain security.
Originally published by the Small Wars Journal, Arizona State University.
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