Singh was supported by former Delhi Police Commissioner Neeraj Kumar, who said that during his stint with the CBI, the agency had chalked a plan to get a "certain gentleman" in Pakistan which was scuttled on the last day by the "political bosses".
"Indian army is very capable. Given a task it will execute it in a much better manner than the Americans did (referring to US operations to kill Osama Bin Laden). As a country I think we have been giving much more elasticity to our limits of tolerance. Somewhere I suppose there are factors which 99 per cent people won't understand as to why?" Singh said, speaking at a book release function here.
"India is not in that state. We have to take care of many things. Especially effect on the economy," the former Army Chief said.
The duo was speaking at the launch of journalist-author S Hussain Zaidi's book "Mumbai Avengers", a fictional account of a covert operation by a retired Indian Army officer to avenge the 26/11 attacks.
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Terming India as a "soft state", Kumar said that India was soft even when it came to "thinking" about avenging.
Kumar went on to say that the agency had also planned of using "non-state" actors for the mission. "All the preparations went down the drain. Lot of money was invested. We had also planned the use of non-state actors as Pakistan has been doing continuously," he said.