"That (coup bid) story was at the behest of somebody," he said. "A routine movement which is meant to test certain units for their efficiency for certain tasks, if that gets construed (as coup), then God help us," he said.
The former Army chief was speaking at the launch of his autobiography, "Courage and Conviction", at the 'Literature Live' literary festival here last evening.
"This was a story which came out from a very "fertile" brain," he said. "When you mobilise, then you mobilise with everything," Singh added.
To a query on the "phobia" about the armed forces in government, the retired Army chief said, "This phobia or this paranoid feeling... I have talked about it in the book. There is this feeling that was there in the 50s and 60s, and that, over a period of time, has been utilised by various other groups, to keep the armed forces slightly away."
"We don't talk of our pockets, we don't think of our pockets. We think of our family only after we think of the nation. Which is not so in the other fields or professions. And that is why you find that this paranoia is there," he said.