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The Afghans tried separatism in the fifties and sixties on the basis of Pakhtunistan and the Durand being an 'unnatural line', never got any traction then either.
Now, with a foreign occupation of Afghanistan and a military campaign against the Taliban, the Afghans have even less of chance of converting a Taliban insurgency into a 'Pakhtun insurgency'.
The majority of the Pakhtun in Pakistan do not live in FATA or Swat, they live in the settled areas of the NWFP and across Pakistan, and they are progressive and moderate, which is why the Taliban remain so unpopular with them. They are increasingly under attack from the Taliban, who are disrupting their economy and way of life, bombing the cities and killing their kith and kin.
So without popular support and an Afghanistan under occupation, how do you expect the Taliban insurgency to make the Durand irrelevant for the Pakhtun and turn the war into one like Vietnam?
Many reasons
1. Very inhospitable Territory and prime for Insurgencies as more boots on the ground will be needed to hold the territory now captured which means more targets for bombing attacks etc which in turn after some years get the local population angry the GOP.
2. These areas were never intergated into Pakistan.
3. Tribal loyalties out weigh all other considerations.
4. Continued US presence.
5. PA is considered an extension of the US Army and staunch ally by the locals.
Regards