No, sir, absolutely it is not. I'm concerned, if I left that impression with anybody.
The Pashtun have dominated Afghanistan for some 300 years in a multi-ethnic society, and it has worked fairly well. At this point, the Pashtuns feel that with the overthrow of the Taliban, which was essentially a Pashtun government, they have lost everything in Afghanistan.
Therefore, no, I'm not saying they would resist a united country dominated by Kabul; the question is whether the Pashtuns will have the major voice within Kabul itself. No, I do not think they would in any way resist a united Afghanistan; they would prefer that. But they simply want to be part of that project.
Yes, it's nationalist, but it's also very religious, and to them there's virtually no difference. If you're Pashtun, you support this kind of religious, rather primitive, mountain type of religion—mountain Islam. If you're religious, that's what you support. It's very hard to distinguish between an ethnic movement and the kind of fundamentalist religious ideals that the Taliban have.
By the way, they're not alone in this. Other elements in Afghanistan also share some of those religious, social values.