Quite easily. Thanks for offering me the chance to talk about math! According to an NIH study,
( https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10294242 )
some 151,000,000 women are on oral birth control, one of the most effective forms of birth control, and a clear sign that the woman is doing her best not to get pregnant. However, 9 out of every 100 women on the pill in a given year have unintended pregnancies.
( https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/treatments/3977-birth-control-the-pill )
The pill can fail for a variety of reasons, but at that rate (.9 x 151 million), you're looking at 13,590,000 unintended pregnancies per year despite a serious effort to prevent them. Now, some of those women may decide to carry those pregnancies to term, and that's wonderful, but some will not, and they deserve the right to make that choice.
Oh, and from the WHO (who do their cohort studies!) "An estimated 240 000 newborns die worldwide within 28 days of birth every year due to congenital disorders. Congenital disorders cause a further 170 000 deaths of children between the ages of 1 month and 5 years." Shouldn't a pregnant woman who discovers that her pregnancy (intended or not) will end in a painful death before the age of 2 have the right to terminate it?