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  • 3 days ago
South Korea’s Navy just pulled off a jaw-dropping display of power at sea :collision:
In its first-ever fleet-level maritime mobility drill, the Navy’s Mobile Fleet Command fired eight SM-2 missiles, taking down four simulated enemy aircraft in a dramatic live-fire exercise
Led by Rear Admiral Kim In-ho, this high-stakes drill tested real-time combat readiness in air defense, anti-ship, and anti-submarine warfare
Multiple Aegis-class destroyers operated together for the first time, signaling a new era of rapid deployment and strategic dominance on the seas
Watch how South Korea’s cutting-edge naval force prepares for the unexpected — and wins every time
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00:00Missiles launched. Enemy aircraft destroyed in seconds. This is no war movie. It's South Korea's
00:06Navy in action. On November 10th, the Navy's elite Mobile Fleet Command launched its first-ever
00:11maritime mobility drill. And it was intense from the very first moment. Aboard the destroyer CY
00:17Ryuseong Ryong, 70 kilometers off Pohang, radar detected incoming threats. Within seconds, eight
00:24SM-2 missiles lit up the sky. Four enemy aircraft wiped off the radar. This wasn't just a
00:29drill. It was a powerful showcase. Led by Rear Admiral Kim In-ho, the Navy tested full-scale
00:36readiness across air, sea, and underwater warfare. This mobile fleet isn't tied to one region.
00:42It moves fast, strikes faster, and plays a key role in South Korea's three-axis defense system,
00:48built to detect and destroy missile threats instantly. Even more impressive, multiple Aegis
00:53destroyers joined forces for the first time ever, including King Jong-jo, Yulgok Yi-won,
00:58and COA Ruseong Ryong, along with support ships and aircraft. The message is clear. South Korea's
01:05mobile fleet is ready for anything, anywhere, anytime.
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