That’s a mixed bag. After 1965 they withdrew strategically oriented land attack missiles from all those Echo and Juliet class SSGNs, and armed them purely with anti ship weapons. The big Oscars only ever had an anti ship role. The main objective in wartime would be attacking aircraft carriers approaching the motherland. This changed with the SS-N-21 cruise missile, several Yankee class former SSBNs got converted to carry that weapon for strategic attacks, and apparently the Aklua class, always labeled as an SSN in the west, was specifically intended to be a platform for that missile as well.thejester wrote: So did the Soviets see the SSN/SSGN forces as primarily defensive?
In terms of SSNs the orientation was also fairly defensive, the Alfa class for example was an outgrowth of a requirement for a high speed interceptor submarine that would actually wait in port until an American force approached and then race out to destroy it. Bastion defence of SSBNs and defence of other chokepoints would be prime wartime missions, but I can’t see the Soviets using every sub defensively. They’d have kept some spread around the world to cause chaos and disperse NATO forces. Just one obsolete November on the sea lanes around South Africa for example, could easily sink a dozen giant modern tankers and freighters in a few days if left unchecked by modern forces.
Think about it, even a single supertanker could make a Soviet captain the worlds new top submarine ace by tonnage.