If you go by wickets per test, yes. If you go by strike rate, no - having strong support from your attack can only be a good thing. Anyways, I'm not getting involved in this.
This is where my point in the other thread comes in with regards to momentum. Warne can bowl a great spell, not take wickets and will have to start all over again. Murali bowls much more and will carry that momentum for a much longer time and will eventually clean up what's left to make his strike-rate acceptable all the while having a negligible effect on the game.
E.g. Warne bowls 25 overs and takes 2 wickets, that is a strike-rate of 75.
Murali bowls 30 overs and takes 2 wickets, but finishes out the rest of the innings with another 10 overs for 2 more wickets and that will bump it up to 60. And really, by then it's a foregone conclusion.
Here is a simple way of thinking about it: Warne bowls either great and takes wickets or bowls great not taking wickets or not bowling well and not taking wickets.
Murali will either bowl well and take wickets or bowl poorly and still take em.
Or even simpler: Warne can bowl well and not take as many wickets and Murali can bowl poor but still take more wickets than he otherwise would.
The law of averages, plus his exceptional skill, says that he will not go through a test match bowling as much as he does, and bowling well and NOT taking wickets. And the way Murali bowls, tight and stock, means even if he isn't taking wickets or bowling well, the sheer amount that he bowls will eventually lead to a wicket or two. Mainly because of two things: his support won't take that many wickets and even if they were bowling well - as has been shown by this whole Vaas argument - Murali bowls way more than them.
Now Warne doesn't have that luxury. He can bowl really great and not take as many wickets as he should. He can bowl bad and he won't get that extra 15 overs to fix it up. For two reasons: his support will take those wickets, and the overs are shared much evenly in the Aussie line-up.
Hence it is a very big stop-start issue that does not translate into the fluency of career-overs-bowled divided by career-wickets-taken.