See above. Could the Ottomans have managed a greater settling into the likes of the Arabian Peninsula, the Levant, Cyprus, Mesopotamia and Yemen than OTL, enough to subsume or outnumber "native" Arab, Aramean, Assyrian and Jewish communities by the 1900s? Would it at all have been to their benefit? What would have the long term effects been? Not only of Turks, but also Albanians, Caucasian Muslims, Circassians, Kurds, Turkmen, etc...
In OTL there was 1.5 million Egyptian Turks as of 1993, 3 million Iraqi Turkemen as of 2013, as much as 3.5 million Syrian Turkmen in Syria, 60K Jordanian Turks, 80K Lebanese Turks, as many as 160K Saudi Turks, and as many as 100K Yemeni Turks.
In addition, there were as many as 7 million "
Muhajir Turks" who migrated to the Ottoman Empire from 1783 to 1914 from formerly Ottoman territories. The bulk of them were settled in Anatolia and by the 1930s another 2 million of them migrated from neighboring countries or regions like the Balkans or Caucasus into the Republic of Turkey. These numbers were not inconsiderable considering that the Muslim population of the Ottoman Empire in 1914 numbered around 15 million.