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WADA dismisses legal action against USADA while maintaining confidence in potential victory.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — In a significant development, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has decided to withdraw a lawsuit and an ethics complaint it initiated against critics in the United States regarding its management of a doping issue related to Chinese swimmers.

The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) announced on Thursday that the defamation lawsuit filed in a Swiss court against it, as well as an ethics complaint aimed at former U.S. drug czar Rahul Gupta, have both been dismissed.

Travis Tygart, the CEO of USADA, referred to the conclusion of these legal disputes as a “complete vindication for us both.” This update was initially disclosed by the digital platform Honest Sport, which secured a letter from WADA’s leadership addressed to its executive board.

In this correspondence, WADA expressed its belief that the lawsuit could have been successful if pursued, yet it deemed further confrontation with those not willing to accept conclusive evidence as futile, emphasizing that such individuals sought to damage the agency and the broader anti-doping framework.

The primary contention between WADA and its detractors revolved around the agency’s handling of the doping cases involving Chinese athletes who had tested positive for banned substances. Controversially, no penalties were imposed after the Chinese anti-doping organization concluded that the positive tests were a result of contamination.

WADA had commissioned an independent investigation, claiming that it acted “reasonably” in its decisions. However, critics argue that this investigation, led by a lawyer selected by WADA, was fundamentally flawed.

Additionally, the agency has also dropped the ethics complaint filed against Gupta in the previous summer. In correspondence with a major news outlet, Gupta remarked that the decision to retract these allegations illustrates the politically driven nature of the unwarranted claims that WADA officials sought to pursue against the United States.

This ongoing controversy has led the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, which Gupta oversaw during the Biden Administration, to refuse payment of its annual dues amounting to $3.6 million to WADA.

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