In his upcoming book 'Cricket As I See It', Border, Australia's 1987 World Cup winning captain, gave his version of the incident involving Indian spinner Harbhajan Singh and Australian batsman Andrew Symonds.
At the peak of the controversy during the 2007-08 series, India had threatened to pull out of the rubber if a three-match ban on Harbhajan was not lifted.
"I was on the Cricket Australia board at the time, and we ultimately accepted the ICC appeal finding and moved on, but it's never sat well with me. We hung Andrew Symonds out to dry and at the time I was annoyed about it. I thought 'This isn't right'. Obviously something happened out there," Border wrote in his book, excerpts of which has been released by 'foxsports.Com.Au'.
Border's book is releasing close on the heels of Sachin Tendulkar's autobiography 'Playing It My Way', in which the legend spoke about how they were on the verge of calling off the tour after Harbhajan was suspended on allegations of racial abuse.
"We were encouraging - and the ICC was encouraging - players to report racial slurs and vilification on the field, but when it actually happened, it went nowhere. It got ugly," Border writes.