The suggestion that Madeleine Albright is/was uninformed regarding international relations and foreign policy is laughable at best, libellous at worst. While I hesitate to rely on Wikipedia as authority for anything, I have heavily borrowed from their biography to capture Ms. Albrights academic and professional credentials:
Academic and public career
-- Awarded a B.A. from Wellesley College with honors in Political Science,
-- studied at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University
-- received a Certificate from the Russian Institute at Columbia University,
-- received her Masters and Doctorate from Columbia University's Department of Public Law and Government.
-- awarded Honorary Doctors of Laws from the University of Washington in 2002 and the University of Winnipeg in 2005.
1976 to 1978: Chief Legislative Assistant to U.S. Senator Edmund Muskie.
1978 to 1981: a staff member of the White House and the National Security Council (Albright was an important Carter Administration official responsible for the formulation of foreign policy legislation)
1981 to 1982: awarded a fellowship at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars at the Smithsonian Institution following an international competition in which she wrote about the role of the press in political changes in Poland during the early 1980s.
1981 to 1982: Senior Fellow in Soviet and Eastern European Affairs at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, conducting research in developments and trends in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
1981: co-founded the Center for National Policy. She also served as President of the organization.
1982: Albright was appointed Research Professor of International Affairs and Director of Women in Foreign Service Program at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service, teaching undergraduate and graduate courses in international affairs, U.S. foreign policy, Russian foreign policy, and Central and Eastern European politics ( She was voted "best teacher" four times).
Before becoming Secretary of State, Albright served as a member of President Clinton's Cabinet. Today, Secretary Albright is once again a professor at Georgetown.
She was appointed US Ambassador to the UN in 1993 until 1997.
She was appointed as the 64th Secretary of State for the United States in 1997, until 2001.
Hardly a women with a glancing familiarity with international relations and foreign policy, don't ya think?