Dubai: Qatar’s emir has warned against any military confrontation over the ongoing diplomatic dispute between his country and four other Arab nations, saying it would only plunge the region into chaos.

His comments drew immediate criticism early Sunday from Emirati Minister of State for International Affairs Anwar Gargash.

“To go to the Western media and attack Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates at this point is desperate,” Gargash wrote on Twitter.

Qatar “should accept its isolation without snivelling and do what it must.”

The four countries boycotting Qatar allege the natural gas-rich nation funds extremists, and are opposed to its support for Islamist opposition groups and ties to Iran, with which it shares a massive gasfield. Doha has long denied funding extremists.

Shaikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani said US President Donald Trump has offered to host a meeting between Qatar and its opponents — Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — to end the crisis between the American allies.

Speaking to the American television network CBS’s ‘60 Minutes’ news programme, Shaikh Tamim said: “It was supposed to be very soon, this meeting,” he said.

The threat of a military confrontation between the countries loomed in the initial days following the start of the boycott on June 5.

Arabic language media in the boycotting nations suggested the need for a “Peninsula Shield” operation, which is the military arm of the Gulf Cooperation Council, though government officials downplayed the idea at the time.

Saudi and UAE forces attached to Peninsula Shield previously deployed into Bahrain to put down its 2011 Arab Spring protests.

In the ‘60 Minutes” interview, which will air Sunday night in the US, Shaikh Tamim said: “I’m fearful that if anything happens, if any military act happens, this region will be in chaos.”