Toyota Motor Corp. on Thursday raised its planned investment in its U.S. operations through 2021 by about a third to nearly $13 billion to build more models and parts in the country, a move that comes as the Trump administration considers imposing tariffs of up to 25% on auto imports.

The Japanese auto maker said the spending would go toward adding production of two new hybrid vehicles in the U.S. and expanding plants that build engines, axles and other vehicle components. The additional investment is projected to create 600 new jobs.

President Trump praised Toyota’s plans in a tweet—“BIG NEWS for U.S. Auto Workers!”—and said the investment was evidence that a trade agreement hammered out last year between the U.S., Canada and Mexico is fixing what he described as a “broken NAFTA deal.”

Compared with the North American Free Trade Agreement, the pending trade pact would require a greater portion of a car to be built in the region to qualify for free trade. It also includes a provision on workers’ wages that could tilt some automotive manufacturing toward the U.S.

Toyota’s announcement comes just weeks after the Commerce Department submitted a report to the White House on whether a reliance on imported vehicles and parts could pose a national security risk, an important justification for imposing tariffs on automotive imports. Toyota has been a vocal critic of the potential tariffs, and has said they would be forced to raise prices of their vehicles if the duties were imposed.