The brief answer is no, not necessarily.
If trade deals—and I say this as a professional economist—increase productivity and competitiveness, that can lead to loss of jobs, if anything, at least in the short term. As an economy's productivity increases, it needs less labour, by which we mean jobs, for the short term. If indeed there is ultimately more trade, both imports and exports—because there are jobs related to imports as well, through distribution and other services—it could lead to more jobs. Over time, probably that is the case as an economy grows and as your trading partner's grows. But I could not make the case—and I wouldn't want you to think—that it's an automatic correlation between trade deals and jobs. It just defies the economics.
Then you look at numbers, and I say this having done a lot of these numbers. They're awfully tentative and they're the most indicative of the possibility of longer-term increases in employment over time.