Hormats said the strategy released adds to America's international engagement on trade secrets in several important ways.
"First of all, we will enhance and track even more effectively our diplomatic engagement by senior administration officials with any country where there are trade secret problems.
The US, Hormats said, will also work with its foreign counterparts to improve legal frameworks in order to provide strong and efficient remedies for trade secret theft victims.
"We will leverage the full scope of our diplomatic resources, what we call our force in the field, which is the US embassies and consulates. We will strive to improve communication and coordination inside of our diplomatic missions and among our diplomatic missions so that they can learn from one another on best practices as well and set forward concrete steps for our embassies and consulates to engage host governments on trade secret issues," he added.
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The US, he said, is moving in the context of international negotiations.
"We're working bilaterally on trade secret-related issues with some key trading partners, and we're also trying to incorporate the protection of trade secrets in the work that we do in non-IT areas like investment," he said.
Marantis said that the US is currently negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which is an 11-country negotiation that is seeking to achieve the highest standards in a whole variety of areas.