You must have a different grasp of grammar to me because "The US" doesn't appear to be a coherent response.
If you're saying that women are being denied abortion access in the US then can you expand on that? How can there be attacks on abortion clinics if they don't exist? Or do they only exist in some states? Basically... what's the issue in the US?
The right to an abortion has been guaranteed by the Supreme Court - all women in this country have the right to get an abortion, however there are no restrictions on the sorts of hoops individual states can make a woman jump through in order to get that abortion.
Mandatory wait periods, doctor referrals, mandatory counseling (before and after), requiring parental consent in cases of minors, restriction of funding (federal - not state funding) to groups that provide abortion services, changing rules about who is and is not qualified to provide abortions all contribute to making abortion
de facto illegal in a majority of states in this country.
There is one center that provides abortion services in Mississippi.
one. Five in Alabama, three in Louisiana, and one in Kentucky.
To give some examples:
In the state of Missouri because of funding and zoning restrictions there exists exactly one abortion clinic in the entire state. It takes 4-5 hours to drive across the state. In addition Missouri also has a mandatory 72-hour wait period on any and all abortions performed. This means that if a woman wants an abortion she has to drive to the
one abortion clinic (which could be 4+ hours), put her name down, drive back home (or get a hotel room for 3 nights), then drive back in 3 days to get the abortion. If you don't own a car abortions are effectively illegal in Missouri. If you work a job that doesn't let you take 3 consecutive days or 2 nonconsecutive days in a work-week abortions are effectively illegal in Missouri.
In Ohio they recently passed a law mandating that all clinics providing abortion services have transfer agreements with private hospitals. Which seems fairly innocent at first except that nearly all hospitals which are deemed "private" are religiously affiliated or funded meaning they will not grant an agreement to an abortion clinic meaning abortion is illegal in Ohio. Ohio is even debating a bill right now which would require women to provide burial or cremation services for their aborted fetus, adding potentially hundreds if not thousands of dollars onto the cost of the abortion.
In Texas requirements have been placed mandating that clinics maintain standards consistent with a large hospital rather than a small clinic providing family planning services. They've also placed restrictions on the types of techniques that can be used in an abortion, making abortions performed after certain dates impossible even though those rights have been affirmed by the Supreme Court. In the whole of the state of Texas there are 9 abortion clinics and none between El Paso and San Antonio - a distance of 551 miles. Texas also has mandatory 24-hour waiting periods and further requires that a woman wanting an abortion: a) be read material about the risks of abortion from a doctor, and b) undergo a physical examination at least 24 hours before the procedure.
In the US abortion is, in a lot of respects, no different than it was pre-Roe v Wade. If you have money and a support structure and live in a place with few restrictions or have the economic security to travel to a place with few restrictions then abortion is legal. But then, it's more or less always been legal for those types of people. If you're poor, live in a red state, or work a job that doesn't give you much or any requested time off, no, abortion is not legal in this country.