Just thought I'd keep it in this thread as Turkey bringing up the idea has implications for NATO, the EU, and the US relationship with Israel and Turkey.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world...?ocid=msedgntp
Erdogan pushes for Turkey to oversee Jerusalem and provide air support to Palestinians
Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his domestic political allies have floated sending military forces to Jerusalem, including fighter jets, to give Palestinians air cover as the Israel-Hamas crisis gives him an opportunity to boost his regional influence and standing at home.
“If there is a call, let us answer it,” Turkish lawmaker Devlet Bahceli, who leads the nationalist party in a coalition with Erdogan, said Tuesday. “Let us stop the bloodshed and ensure peace and stability.”

That statement reinforces Erdogan’s message in a late Monday speech, in which the Turkish leader proposed to alter the administration of Jerusalem. Such a development would upend the current Arab oversight of the holy sites and place a NATO country and its military in an adversarial setting with Israeli forces.

"At this point, we believe there's a need for a separate arrangement on Jerusalem,” Erdogan said Monday. "In today's circumstances, it would be the most correct and consistent course of action for Jerusalem to be administered by a commission of representatives from the three faiths. Otherwise, it doesn't appear it will be easily possible to achieve lasting peace in this ancient city.”
Erdogan floated the idea of sending an “international protection force" last week following a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, although the Kremlin team showed no public sign of interest in such an effort.

The Turkish leader observed that Israel has air power while the militants in Gaza do not, without committing to a specific military proposal — a notable absence that lends itself to the assessment that Erdogan is trying to boost his sagging political approval ratings at home, rather than orchestrate a major shift in the regional balance of power.

“This is Erdogan being strategically ambiguous on purpose,” former Turkish opposition lawmaker Aykan Erdemir, a senior analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told the Washington Examiner. “He’s proposing a vague idea of either a peacekeeping force or a Turkish deployment, knowing fully well it will not materialize, but at the same time, appealing to his voter base and his fans around the world.”

Still, such a domestic political maneuver could reinforce the suspicions between Gulf Arab states and Erdogan, whose Muslim Brotherhood sympathies and affinity for the late Ottoman Empire has fed tensions between the leaders of the Sunni Muslim world.

“Arab leaders would see this as threatening, even if it’s just rhetoric because ultimately such rhetoric not only appeals to Erdogan’s support base at home, but it also appeals to the Arab street and sympathizers of the Muslim Brotherhood,” Erdemir said. “Even though nothing concrete is expected to come out of Erdogan’s calls, it still has the capacity to undermine traditional Arab leaders.”

Jordan’s King Abdullah II has “custodianship” of the holy sites in Jerusalem, a status he has determined to maintain in the face of speculation that other Arab powers might try to muscle him out. “I will never change my position toward Jerusalem in my life,” he said in November. “All my people are with me.”
Erdogan and Bahceli, his coalition ally, accused the United States of emboldening Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “The indifference of leaders in the Muslim world strengthens Israel’s hand,” Bahceli said.


I'll assume all of this is just Erdogan posturing for domestic politics benefit but Turkey has been a bit of a wild card the last few years and looking at the resource exploration they're doing around Cyprus I wouldn't put it past them to form an 'alliance' of sorts with Hamas or the PLA.