Probably. Fleming seemed to have peculiar ideas on what constituted an interesting flaw.
Tiffany Case had been gang-raped, Honeychile Ryder had a broken nose, Tatania Romanova had too wide a mouth, Tilly Masterson (and Pussy Galore - delightfully parodied in the Israel Bond books as Poontang Plenty) were lesbians, Vesper Lynd was a Soviet double agent, Solitaire was psychic, and Domino whatever-it-was had one leg shorter than the other. An interesting mix.
I can’t remember any of the other major female characters who had flaws. Kissy Suzuki was Japanese, which probably doesn’t count for Fleming, Mary Goodnight had none (but Bond never got to do her until after the book ended), and the female double agent in Property of a Lady was ugly, although she and Bond never even met.
The only other female character that occurs to me is the Soviet markswoman in The Living Daylights. Bond deliberately does not shoot her, which is the only example of semi-sexual restraint (apart from not screwing Honey Ryder in the bathroom after Dr. No captures them) Bond ever shows. Although he does spend some time earlier in the story, after seeing her carrying a cello case, about her holding an ungainly instrument between her splayed thighs. :rolleyes: A little heavy-handed, I thought.
Regards,
Shodan