Single Integrated Operational Plan (SIOP), U.S. strategic war-fighting plan for the use of nuclear weapons that contains the specifics of targeting orders, scheduling, and needed weapons. The first SIOP was approved in late 1960 as an attempt to develop a more systematic approach to the various targets for potential U.S. nuclear strikes.
The SIOP is the culmination of a long process that begins with the president, who provides the Department of Defense (DoD) with a conceptual guide for the use of nuclear weapons. The DoD converts that information into the Nuclear Weapons Employment Policy, a list of objectives, specific targets, and operational constraints. The Joint Chiefs of Staff then rework that list into the Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan. The Strategic Command uses the Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan to compile the SIOP. A new SIOP is approved each year, even if it is not fundamentally different from the previous year’s plan.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower and other top officials believed that the first SIOP went too far because it called for multiple nuclear strikes against military and urban-industrial targets (i.e., “countervalue” targets) in the Soviet Union, China, and their allies. The initial SIOP also tried to unite the various nuclear forces of the U.S. Air Force, Navy, and Army.
Since then SIOPs have changed based on new thinking about nuclear strategy. The plans focused on counterforce strategy from the early to mid-1960s, deterrence and more-flexible responses with limited nuclear options in the mid-1970s and early 1980s, and again on counterforce strategy in the mid- to late 1980s. The number of targets dropped dramatically after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
The SIOP is one of the most highly classified of all U.S. government documents, and many details about it remain shrouded in mystery. From the beginning, a special information category—extremely sensitive information (ESI)—has been attached to the SIOP.