The CPTPP, which is what it ended being, is an agreement we didn't support. We didn't support it on the basis of having full reciprocal access to markets in the countries that are part of that agreement. Some of those countries, even while the negotiation was under way, were introducing more constraints and restricting access, such as Vietnam.
When we negotiate these international agreements, we should be looking at it through the lens of what is good for our domestic industry. That's what these countries are doing. If we can't gain full reciprocal access, which we have unsatisfactorily addressed to date, because of non-tariff barriers which they've introduced and continue to introduce, that is not helpful to our domestic industry. Ultimately, this could be very harmful to us.
In the United States, that's exactly what the Americans are doing. They're negotiating these international agreements through the lens of what is helpful to the long-term viability of their domestic industry. That's what we need to keep in mind when we're negotiating these other agreements.