<p >The Polish Army is scheduled to receive 96&nbsp;<a href="https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/nato-top-tankfirst-live-fire" target="_blank" >K2 Black Panther main battle tanks</a>&nbsp;from South Korea in 2025, completing a $3.4 billion order placed in August 2022 for 180 of the vehicles. The surge in deliveries is expected to further highlight South Korea’s uniquely high production capabilities for advanced main battle tanks, which allows clients to furnish their armies with new vehicles in fractions of the time required to make similar acquisitions of other NATO standard tank classes from Germany or the United States. Poland received six additional K2 tanks in November 2024, bringing total deliveries since December 2022 to 77 vehicles. The delivery of 96 vehicles in 2025 will thus represent a more than tripling of delivery rates compared to the preceding two years. The latest delivery closely follows the mid-November&nbsp;<a href="https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/poland-k2-tanks-russian-border" target="_blank">deployment of K2s</a> by the Polish Army to Braniewo, a few kilometres from the border with the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad, at a time of rising tensions between Warsaw and Moscow primarily over the ongoing war in Ukraine.</p><p ><img src="https://militarywatchmagazine.com/m/articles/2024/11/30/article_674a935fb29416_48250609.jpg" title="Polish Army K2 Black Panther Tanks"></p><p >Following the completion of deliveries of the first 180 K2 tanks in 2025, the Polish Army will from 2026 begin to receive the first of 820 further tanks from South Korea, which will bring total fleet to 1000 tanks. Tanks delivered from 2026 will be locally assembled in Poland, and will be customised with reinforced armour, a new active protection system, and a locally developed battlefield management system. Hyundai Rotem, which developed the K2, has agreed to technology transfers as part of the deal. Alongside acquisitions of K2s, Poland has placed very large orders for Korean K9 mobile howitzers and&nbsp;<a href="https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/poland-expands-skorean-chunmoo-order" >Chunmoo rocket artillery</a>, as well as American M1A1 and M1A2&nbsp;<a href="https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/delivery-116-m1a1-poland-major-war" >Abrams tanks</a>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<a href="https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/poland-486-himars-purchase" >HIMARS rocket artillery systems</a>, fuelling projections that it will soon deploy the second most potent ground force in NATO after the United Sates. Warsaw has effectively resisted pressure from other members of the European Union to acquire European produced equipment, such as German Leopard 2A8 tanks, which has allowed it to build up a highly potent ground force much faster, using much more modern equipment, and at a significantly lower cost. South Korea’s defence sector is seen to have significant cost effectiveness advantages over those in Europe, with major contracts with Poland signed from 2022 marking a significant and long awaited breakthrough into European markets.</p>