Poland Deploys Advanced Korean K2 Tanks on Russian Border: Why Moscow Should Be Concerned

<p >The Polish Army has deployed South Korean <a href=" target="_blank">K2 Black Panther main battle tanks</a> in Braniewo, a few kilometers from the border with the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad region, according to a statement by press secretary of the 16th Pomeranian Mechanised Division Major Magdalena Koszczynska. The deployment has occurred amid rising tensions between Warsaw and Moscow primarily over the ongoing war in Ukraine, and at a time when the Polish Army is rapidly receiving new batches of K2 tanks after placing a $3.4 billion for 180 of the vehicles in August 2022. The Polish Defence Ministry has planned to acquire close to 1000 K2s, with rapid deliveries having been particularly vital due to the large scale divestment of the country’s older German Leopard 2 and Soviet T-72 tanks which have been <a href=" target="_blank">sent to Ukraine as aid</a>. The rapid deployment of a very large K2 forces in Eastern Europe, and by a state that has consistently taken a particularly hardline position against Russia, is one of the developments in NATO’s ground forces that is thought to be of greatest concern to security planners in Moscow. </p><p ><img src=" title="Polish K2 Tanks"></p><p >The K2 is in many respects the most capable tank fielded by any NATO member state today, with the vehicle notably using an autoloader which reduces crew requirements by 25 percent, while boasting a faster rate of fire, much greater fuel efficiency, lower maintenance needs, and the ability to operate as an artillery system with an indirect fire mode – all major advantages over Western tank designs. The South Korean tank class also integrates a radar which sets it apart from other vehicles, and combined with a laser rangefinder and a crosswind sensor provides a lock-on targeting. Its thermographic camera with a 'lock on' mode allows it to track specific targets at very long ranges of of 9.8 kilometres, while its millimetre band radar system can serve as a Missile Approach Warning System. This works with the K2’s computer's ability to triangulate incoming projectiles and fire visual and infrared screening smoke grenades. The South Korean supplied tank is expected to outperform Russia’s top tank classes the T-90M and T-80BVM, although it may compare less favourable to Russia’s two new tank classes currently under development, including the <a href=" target="_blank">next generation T-14 </a>and an <a href=" target="_blank">enhanced new T-80 variant</a>. </p><p ><img src=" title="K2 Black Panther Tanks"></p><p >The deployment of K2s near Kaliningrad could be cause for serious concern in Russia, with the enclave being surrounded by NATO forces and cut off from the Russian mainland. The Polish decision follows a <a href=" of the country’s forces </a>on the Belarusian border from August. Alongside acquisitions of K2s, Poland has placed very large orders for Korean K9 mobile howitzers and <a href=" rocket artillery</a>, as well as American M1A1 and M1A2 <a href=" tanks</a> and <a href=" rocket artillery systems</a>, fuelling projections that it will soon deploy the second most potent ground force in NATO after the United Sates. While South Korean exports fuel the rise of Poland’s army, Russia has seen its <a href=" target="_blank">missile</a> and <a href=" target="_blank">artillery capabilities</a> bolstered significant by acquisitions from North Korea. Russian ground units’ anti tank capabilities have also been bolstered in 2024 by the acquisition of their first anti tank missile class with Non Line of Sight targeting capabilities, the <a href=" target="_blank">North Korean Bulsae-4</a>, which has a comparable performance to the American Javelin but 250 percent as long a range. If acquired on a large enough scale, the North Korean system will revolutionise the anti tank targeting capabilities of the country’s ground units.</p>

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