International and U.S. Olympic leaders finalized a new revenue-sharing agreement that ends years of acrimony between the powerful bodies and clears the way for future American bids for the games, two officials with knowledge of the negotiations said Thursday. The officials told The Associated Press the long-term deal received final approval from the International Olympic Committee executive board and will be signed by both sides later Thursday. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the agreement is to be formally announced at a news conference by IOC President Jacques Rogge and U.S. Olympic Committee chairman Larry Probst and CEO Scott Blackmun. The deal, which runs until 2040, resolves a long-running dispute over the U.S. share of Olympic television and marketing revenues that soured relations between the two bodies and undermined recent American bids for the games. The USOC had said repeatedly it will not bid again until the revenue issue is resolved. With a deal now in place, the U.S. will consider whether to bid for the 2022 Winter Games or 2024 Summer Olympics. Under a long-standing contract, the USOC has received a 20 percent share of global sponsorship revenue and a 12.75 percent cut of U.S. broadcast rights…