Ruling BJP questioned the timing of the former Union minister's claim, but the latter stood firm on what he had said.
Replying to a question at a book release function here yesterday, Tewari virtually dug out the nearly four-year-old controversy from its grave, saying, "At that point of time I used to serve in the Standing Committee on Defence. And it's unfortunate but the story was true. Story was correct."
The Congress leader was asked about media coverage of issues pertaining to defence forces as in the case of the Indian Express report on April 4, 2012, titled "The January night Raisina Hill was spooked: Two key Army units moved towards Delhi without notifying Govt."
V K Singh, now Minister of State for External Affairs, dismissed Tewari's allegation saying it has come from a "person who has no work these days".
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An embarrassed Congress, which had rejected the report when the controversy had erupted for the first time, dismissed Tewari's claim.
"I am again clarifying there is absolutely no truth in it (claims about troop movement in 2012). My colleague was neither a member of the Cabinet Committee on Security, nor any relevant decision making body," Congress spokesman Abhishek Singhvi said, adding some troop movements are necessary, "inbuilt and inevitable part of the defence mechanism".
"It was inappropriate, unnecessary and completely wrong to suggest that there was any truth in those allegations when made," he said.
Isolated in his own party over his claim, Tewari said,"Whatever I said yesterday, I have nothing more to add or subtract."
According to The Indian Express report, central intelligence agencies had reported that on the night of January 16, 2012 there was an unexpected - and non-notified - movement by a key military unit from mechanised infantry based in Hisar in the direction of the capital.