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WADA withdraws legal action against USADA, but remains confident of victory.

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has decided to withdraw both a lawsuit and an ethics complaint it had filed against certain critics in the United States regarding its management of a doping case involving Chinese swimmers. This announcement was made public by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) on Thursday. The legal action, which was launched in a Swiss court against USADA, as well as the ethics complaint aimed at former U.S. drug czar Rahul Gupta, has been officially rescinded.

Travis Tygart, the CEO of USADA, expressed that the conclusion of these legal endeavors represents “complete vindication for us both.” The initial report of the withdrawal was shared by the website Honest Sport, which got hold of a correspondence from WADA’s leadership to its executive committee.

In the letter, WADA maintained that although they believed the lawsuit had a strong chance of success in court, they ultimately concluded that it was unproductive to contend with individuals who refuse to acknowledge substantial evidence and who appear focused solely on undermining WADA and the larger anti-doping framework.

The underlying issue at the heart of the recent conflict revolved around WADA’s actions concerning a group of Chinese swimmers who had tested positive for banned substances yet faced no disciplinary measures after the Chinese anti-doping agency attributed their positive results to contamination. WADA, in response, initiated what it characterized as an independent investigation which concluded that their handling of the situation was “reasonable,” a finding that critics argue is questionable due to the lawyer’s appointment being carried out by WADA itself.

Moreover, WADA also took the step of dropping the ethics complaint that was filed against Gupta last summer, who served on WADA’s executive committee during that period. In a communication to the New York Times, Gupta indicated that the resolution of these claims highlights the politically charged and baseless nature of the allegations pursued by WADA’s leadership against the United States.

The discord stemming from these disputes ultimately prompted the White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy, headed by Gupta during the Biden Administration, to halt payment of its annual membership fees amounting to $3.6 million to WADA.

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