Or that they already have a trade surplus with most of the world in terms of services, which - for developed economies - is preferable over a manufactured goods surplus?
Or that trying to achieve a surplus or even a 'balance' on goods traded threatens the dollar's reserve currency status, which by its very nature requires running trade deficits, without which the U.S. economy literally can't function since that allows for low interest rates for the government, low borrowing costs for consumers, and all the endless money-printing that they use to afford - among other things - military development and procurement?
This isn't even Economics 101, more like the bare minimum you should know before even considering the course.