Perhaps. Also it seems like Switzerland would be much more at risk of having its neutrality violated in this scenario.
I don't see how it could be neutral at all with those territories. There is something to be said about being tucked away in the mountains for preserving neutrality (that is, nobody wants to invade you).
More to the point, I think the most likely way to get that is an alternate development of Austria (gaining the Kingdom of Burgundy early on and then consolidating the area between) than any sort of Switzerland.
For starters that Tyrol is a very maximalist version of the Habsburg claims in the area (though I think the borders in the Valtellina are a bit wonky myself)
What really marks it out as 'essentially not-at-all like Switzerland' is the fact that apparently Bern is content to be dominated by the French speaking Burgundians, while the farmers of the Waldstätte have decided to give up their independence and allow themselves to be dominated by the city of Zurich.
Essentially those provinces are just too big for something like Switzerland. It looks more like some sort of weird post WWI or II plan to secure a peace by separating all the combatants.