As a red, white, and blue blooded 'Murican, I've seen the way people from other nations interact with Americans as well as vice versa, and honestly, I've noticed that even the people here tend to forget that we are privileged to be able to indulge in every part of the world with minimal friction
Even when it comes to politics that go onto the world stage, Americans are extremely American-centric, regardless of their skin color. For instance, Latino-Americans, despite being Latino themselves, overstepped their boundaries to impose their linguistic sensibilities onto non-American Latinos in the name of LGBTQ+ representation regardless of the opinions belonging to LGBTQ+ individuals in these nations, leading to the whole 'Latinx' controversy. Just like our culture, everything is just a performance so that we could feel better about ourselves, a remnant of American exceptionalism. We call for peace when, in actuality, we just want "peace, except I get to benefit completely from it regardless of what others will have to go through while also not having to feel bad about it"
This desire has even seeped into our day-to-day interactions with each other in America. However, because that would have to admit that we're not the infallible, enlightened protagonists we think we are, nobody wants to point it out. Instead, we fall back on excuses to brush it under the rug
While I don't blame my fellow Americans for this due to how ingrained American exceptionalism in baked into our culture, (hell, even I've had to do some introspection) I can imagine how frustrating it is for people who don't have the same privilege of being a part of a global superpower