I removed references of Muay Thai from the Krav Maga page. The article referenced didn't support the claims asserted on the page. it stated that Andre' Zeitun was an IDF instructor, but the article doesn't claim this; it doesn't even say he was part of the IDF. It simply states that he "introduced Muay Thai to the military." Also claim the Muay Thai as part of Krav Maga but again the article doesn't support this. Being "introduced to the military," "having influenced some kicks" and having "Muay Thai like techniques" does not equate to Muay Thai being an official part of the founding arts of Krav Maga. Martial artists are often influenced by techniques from other disciplines in fine tuning their current techniques, but that doesn't mean they now are proficient practitioners from those secondary exposures. Also, the claim that Muay Thai was introduced to the military and had some influence on kicks is quite different than claiming it was integrated into Krav Maga. From these quotes in the magazine the only thing that can be objectively determined is that some guy named Andre' Zeitun, in the 80's, who knew Muay Thai, had an opportunity to illustrate Muay Thai to others in the military, and that influenced by some indeterminable degree how the kicks were done in Krav Maga. These are very weak, indeterminable, and noncommittal statements to conclude that Muay Thai is a significant part of the makeup of Krav Maga; it is a massive stretch of the content within the article. There is nothing within this article to indicate an official adoption of techniques from Muay Thai into Krav Maga; in fact the weakness of the references to Muay Thai within the article indicate that any Muay Thai's influence is incidental. If you disagree please contact my talk page and we can discuss this further and find a compromise on an appropriate reference/posting regarding Muay Thai.