South Korea In the 1970s, South Korea came in need of wheeled armored vehicles to protect major cities and airfields against North Korean special forces by providing quick placement of defending troops. In 1976, South Korea received a sample of
Thyssen Henschel UR-416 from
West Germany and a CM6614 from Italy. South Korea originally selected UR-416 for license production; however, due to political tension between South Korea and the United States, the U.S. blocked
NATO members from selling such armored vehicles to South Korea. After hearing a refusal from West Germany, South Korea turned its eye to Italian company Fiat, which was very eager to sell the CM6614, and signed a contract behind the curtain for a license under the designation KM900. To avoid the restriction from NATO, Italy and South Korea smuggled CM6614 by shipping by parts to third countries, then rerouted to
Pusan for transferring to
Asia Motors (now
Kia) for assembly. During the trial, South Korea found major flaws in Italian armor steel, thus requested transfer of armor steel and run-flat tire technology in order to fix the problem and strengthen logistics by producing locally. The transferred technologies were sent to Korean steel & tire manufacturing companies and research groups, and became the basis for future Korean-made armor steel that is used in current MBTs, SPHs, IFVs, and even by the navy's destroyers. KM900/KM901s were put in service since 1977, and were mainly used by the
Republic of Korea Army Capital Defense Command, and airfield securities of the
Republic of Korea Air Force. The ROKAF began replacing KM900/KM901 with K200A1 APCs since 1997. The ROKA also retired all these vehicles from active service by mid-2016, and will replace the inventory with newly developed K806/K808 APCs. ==Variants==