Single
Integrated
Operations
Plan. The name for the
United States' plan for
nuclear war from the 1950s through the 1960s. Initially, the SIOP embodied
massive retaliation, as there were no provisions for lower levels of response; triggering the SIOP meant, in the words of
WOPR/Joshua,
global thermonuclear war. However, in the face of criticisms that this was
detrimental to
deterrence (because no-one would believe the SIOP would be triggered for smaller offenses like, say, the
invasion of
Iran by the
Soviet Union in a move for the
Persian Gulf oil reserves) the SIOP was broken up into a variety of smaller 'component' missions, which could be executed individually. This was known as the doctrine of
flexible response.