According to the BR.com the U.S BD is "PG-13".
According to the BBFC page the U.K. BD is "12A".
From the same site, and I quote, "All known versions of this work passed uncut" although under "Pre-cuts information" we have, "During post-production the distributor sought and was given advise on how to secure the desired classification. Following this advise certain changes were made prior to submission".
BBFC Insight (published on the 16/10/15) has a rundown of the examples of violence, threat and bad language and I've got to say that some of the violence - "including a brief moment of eye-gouging" - SOUNDS pretty strong to me for a 12 year old viewer !
(For aficionados of swearing in films there's always the old favourites as well as some new ones with a high F. word count including:- THE WOLF OF WALL ST., CASINO, STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON, GOODFELLAS (mostly uttered by Joe Pesci who won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his profane performance !) or RESERVOIR DOGS.
As we all know both the F. word and the C. word go back at least 500 years (and both are used quite liberally in a film I've just seen - Ben Wheatley's "A Field in England" set in around the 1650s) though it wasn't until 1972 that both words were included in the Oxford English Dictionary and the Campaign for Real Swearing issued a statement which reads "We'd be a bunch of lying cu- - - if we didn't say that we were totally fu - - ing delighted". In 1991 we have the Rev. Ian Gregory of the Polite Society proposing that existing swear-words are banished and replaced with nice words like 'breadstick' and 'cotton socks' " and the response from the Campaign for Real Swearing was "The good reverend can go and f - - - himself ! ". You couldn't make it up.
In conclusion: NOT CUT by the BBFC but CUT by the studio/distributor (all versions).
I suppose that's fine though as Bond was always out-and-out blockbusting entertainment for most of the family with the car and the power-boat chases, the luxury/exotic destinations, the stylish and glamorous clothes and females, coupled with the un-PC humour of Connery and the raised eyebrow of Moore - not forgetting later incarnations with their own individual styles - and clearly not meant to compete with the violence and bad language of some of those films noted above.