No, there's no such thing. The way you think about means that you don't have enough knowledge about Turkish history or that you have been seriously manipulated.
Ofc, we would like to have good relations with other Turkic peoples. However, we have never adopted a Pan-Turkist policy in any period of history. Find out why the Oghuzs came from the Seyhun region. I can give you hundreds of examples.
Turks are a nation that knows how to live in harmony with other peoples in their regions. In the Balkans, North Africa and even in the history of your country there is no black spot.
But the Russians were so frightened by the fact that the Turks had become a whole, and for almost 200 years, they tried to eliminate the Turkish cultural unity in Central Asia. The political infrastructure of the Fergana valley is one of the clear indications. Meskhetian Turks, Crimean Turks and many other Turkish tribes have been subjected to genocide or deported. Everyone speaks of 5 million Jews killed in the Second World War. Did you see anyone speak the 5 million Turks killed by the Soviets?
Our fear is that the same thing happens to Turkistan today. By killing or systematic assimilation, what's the difference?
Approximately 30% of Oghuz Turks are Shiites. Around 5% is Christian. For example, the Gagauz people are Christians as a whole. which are deported from their lands by Christian Bulgars ( another ancient Turkic-root nation ) . The claim that the Turks were a secret religious agenda was also unfounded. There are still millions of Turks who continue their traditional beliefs.
I'm sorry, but the way you formulate the Uighur problem is very wrong.
Today most of the Turkish people favor the territorial integrity of the Chinese state. We are aware that US channels want to use Uighurs to weaken China, which is a rising power. Our sadness is that in this imperial war hitting these people, who only troubled to protect their culture and religion, are paying the heaviest price. That price is the disappearance of a nation.