WI: Levant under industrialized Ottomans

Based from the thread which is about Egypt. This time, it'll be about the Levant (which is Cyprus, Syria, Lebanon, Israel and Jordan) region under the rule of the successfully industrialized Ottoman Empire. The scenario is where the Ottoman Empire industrialized earlier than OTL and doing a good job at it.

The question is how would Levant under the industrialized Ottoman Empire would turned out to be like?

I can see coastal areas being more developed than OTL while certain key cities like Damascus are modernized.

If this industrialized Ottoman Empire granted independence to the Levantine countries, how would they turned out to be like?
 
If the Levant region as a whole became its own country, there would be no Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, or Iraq. Just maybe the Middle East will be relatively more politically stable as a result?
 
The Levant probably remains a fairly sleepy, rural portion of the Empire; it simply lacks the population density, suitable terrain for good infrastructural development (A lot of high hills/mountains that cut the region into small vallies), and agricultural productivity to really become an industrial center, nor does it possess a particularly valuble deposit of raw materials or soil for valuable horticulture. You might see some moderate levels of silk production, and maybe one of the ports in the region becomes a commercial-financial center by harnessing the combined connections of Mt. Lebanon and Jewish mercantile families who migrate in for religious reasons (Jaffa or Beirut?), but other than that it probably remains one of the most underdeveloped portions of an otherwise industrializing nation, becoming the Ottoman equivalent of their contemporaries in the British Highlands, French Vendee, German East Prussia, or American Southwest
 
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