The back-and-forth over the games comes as four Arab nations, including the United Arab Emirates, have been boycotting Qatar for months, in part over allegations that it supports extremists and has overly warm ties to Iran.
Qatar has long denied supporting extremists, while it shares a massive offshore natural gas field with Tehran. This shows the boycott "is founded on petty jealousy, not real concerns," a statement from Qatar's Government Communications Office said.
Lobbying firms and interest groups funded by the boycotting Arab nations increasingly have focused on Qatar's hosting of the soccer tournament.
They have pointed to allegations of corruption surrounding Qatar's winning bid, as well as the conditions that laborers working in the country face in building infrastructure for the games. Such conditions are prevalent across Gulf-Arab nations.
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On Sunday, a Dubai security official wrote on Twitter that the only way for "Qatar's crisis" to end is if Doha gives up the tournament. Lt General Dhahi Khalfan later said his "personal analysis" of the financial pressure Doha faces in hosting the games had been misunderstood.
Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE began their boycott of Qatar on June 5. Mediation efforts by Kuwait, the US and others so far have failed to resolve the diplomatic crisis, the worst to hit the Gulf since Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait.
When Qatar's sole land border with Saudi Arabia was closed and sea traffic cut off by the boycott, World Cup organisers were forced to instigate a "Plan B", including bringing in supplies from Turkey. Qatari authorities say their efforts at building stadiums and infrastructure for the tournament, the first to be held in the Mid-east, remain on track.
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