The skills a programmer needs depends very much on the environment and, in particular, the size of the project and the company - and the size is for me the more critical factor.
Generally speaking the smaller the team the more you need to be a generalist. Once you get to a project team of 5 or 6 you might be able to absorb one or two specialists, however with a team that size the chances of you having to address something outside your core competence increases. I'm not talking about consistently moving from pillar to post, more that as individuals are on leave, sick or just plain busy, the project may need you to fill a gap which doesn't necessarily sit within your specialisation.
If you're in a project team of 20 or more then you can absolutely specialise and indeed at that size it's probably optimal if 80% or so of the team are focused on specific skills with the remaining 20% filling the cracks.
The numbers apply (at slightly increased levels) to companies too. Generally smaller companies will need people to be more generalist.
I'm development manager in a company of 20-odd (mostly technical). Right now I wouldn't recruit anyone who I wasn't comfortable interacting with clients either to gather basic requirements or do issue analysis.
The way work ebbs and flows means that there are going to be weeks when there isn't enough hardcore development (that is taking specs and turning them into code, as opposed to writing specs, doing support or whatever) to keep all the developers busy.
At that point trying to juggle a resource schedule in which people have constraints beyond their technical specialities (our technology stack is necessarily fairly broad so this is unavoidable) is one constraint too many.
We're now arriving at the size where that will start to change and once we hit 30 people I'd imagine we'll have far more flexibility to recruit specialists but if you want to work in a smaller company soft skills are likely to be very desirable, if not critical.
But even beyond that overall I would suggest that the wider array of skills you have, even at a basic level, the more useful you potentially are to your team and your company.
You don't need to be able to do everything but sometimes there's a rather wilful "I'm not interested in doing that so won't". If you want to take that approach that's fine but don't be surprised when some decent opportunities are closed off to you because someone isn't willing to work around you.
What I also find interesting is that in my experience most of the best programmers really don't have the "typical" programmer mindset (for which read antisocial nerd with no social skills) and are very capable of dealing with people. I'd suggest that part of the reason they are amongst the best programmers is because they can do this as much as it is their technical skills.