Relations (1)

cross_type 2.00 — strongly supporting 3 facts

The U.S. is actively promoting and establishing investment screening mechanisms as a core component of its economic security agreements with various nations, as evidenced by its commitments with Thailand [1], Ecuador [2], and its broader trade policy framework [3].

Facts (3)

Sources
Tracking Trump's Trade Deals | Council on Foreign Relations cfr.org Inu Manak, Allison J. Smith · Council on Foreign Relations 3 facts
claimEconomic security commitments between the United States and Thailand are organized around addressing third-party unfair trade practices, supply chain resilience, export controls, investment screening, and duty evasion.
claimEcuador agreed to cooperate with the United States on economic security priorities, including export controls, duty evasion, and investment screening, and to take complementary actions to address nonmarket practices, similar to the agreement between the United States and South Korea.
claimNew U.S. trade deals prioritize 'economic security,' which includes provisions for mirroring U.S. trade actions toward third countries, establishing investment-screening mechanisms, excluding specific countries from government procurement contracts, and committing to cooperation on supply chain resilience.