Former Army chief General V K Singh has dismissed the story of an alleged coup attempt by Indian army in January 2012 as the product of a "very fertile brain" and said it was at "somebody's behest".
"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. Asked if it was necessary to have live missiles as part of the movement, Singh replied, "Obviously. You move with the complete ammunition. You don't take duds with you. How will you know the timing taken to draw those missiles. How will you get the lessons," he said.
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"They feel that the armed forces get people who only think of the country. That's the difference. You and me have always thought that the nation comes first, always and every time.
"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.