not yet. Maybe in the future.
After independence the thirteen colonies were already a nation in themselves. Expanding further westward into lands already inhabited by tribes (which technically were nations in themselves) was no different from Hitler expanding an already existing Germany further east.
According to the Nazis they were expanding an already existing nation, no different from America's westward expansion (Manifest Destiny).
Why couldn't Americans just be content with the Eastern protion of North America? Why did they conquer Lebensraum in Western parts of North America?
In fact Hitler mentions in
Mein Kampf that Germany's expansion towards the east is it's destiny, one which already was a policy of early Germanic kingdoms.
This is not very different from early American pioneers and imperialists viewing White settlers as the tamers of the "Wild West" where "savages" roamed without law and order and needed to be "civilized".
Things like "world dominance" are just propaganda catch phrases, because let's be honest, which country has been dominating the world since the defeat of the evil Nazis?
Which country turns other nations into giant concentration camps through measures like trade embargoes and economic sanctions, thus resulting in mass deaths of non-combatants? Not Nazi Germany.
Nazi Germany has been long since defeated, but the world domination is being done by the ostensibly "good" guys.
As evil as the Nazis were (though still lagging behind Western powers), at least they were honest and did not slaughter in the name of "freedom", "democracy" and "equality" and starve entire populations resulting in the deaths of 500,000 children like in Iraq during the 1990's.
In the case of France they, along with Britain declared war on Germany.
But you are suggesting that the native Americans should fit a specific definition in order to be classified as a nation? Otherwise it's not as evil to take their lands vs. the Nazis taking land from what you might consider to be legitimate nations because they fit a certain definition?
Also, how is Hitler invading Poland to take back Danzig (was a part of Prussia/Germany for 700 years) worse than America invading Mexico and taking Texas?
Just because Americans used muskets and canons to take Texas from Mexico doesn't make their conquest any less "evil" to Germans who used Stukas and tanks to take Danzig, which mind you unlike Texas, was German for 700 years until it was severed from Germany in Versailles treaty.
Or Putin invading Ukraine and taking the Crimea?
But with regards to USSR, the Nazis did not consider it a legitimate nation anymore than the American pioneers and settlers considered the various Indian tribes as legitimate nations. Sure, today the US government does classify Indian tribes as nations after having relegated them to reservations, but in the past they were uncivilized savages.
So in this regard there is no difference between the founding forces of America and Nazism because the parallels are there and this is where modern Leftists/Liberals who want to tear down every Presidential monument and open America's borders base the crux of their argument on, that America was built on genocide, slavery, Jim Crow and imperialism and must atone for it's guilty past just like Germany has been doing for the Holocaust since 1945.
It is still imperialism and genocide regardless of the methods employed.
Because the fact remains that one completely alien group of people displaced and wiped out an indigenous population,
thats genocide according to the United Nations charter which ironically US and other allied nations created at the end of WW2.
So Blitzkrieg or not, it's still genocide and imperialism and Leftists are not incorrect when they call it out as such.
How is deliberately dropping radio active explosives on civilian populations, who's after effects will slowly kill people for generations, vastly different and justifiable compared to the alleged gassings of people?
I think that's a failed dichotomy.
In both cases civilians were deliberately targeted, and if killing Innocents qualifies Hitler for evilness than America and the rest of the West is right up there with him.
But I think Churchill will beg to differ with you because he thought Indians bred like rabbits and thus could afford to die here and there since there were already "more than enough of them"
http://www.ibtimes.com/bengal-famine-1943-man-made-holocaust-1100525
Later at a War Cabinet meeting, Churchill blamed the Indians themselves for the famine, saying that they “breed like rabbits.”
His attitude toward Indians was made crystal clear when he told Secretary of State for India Leopold Amery: "I hate Indians. They are a beastly people with a beastly religion."
And surely, America's number one ally and the "only democracy in the middle East" commemorates him with a statue:
https://www.haaretz.com/churchill-bust-unveiled-in-jerusalem-1.5196101
Now if I were to post the quotes of America's early Presidents who lead the Westward expansion I'm afraid they'll even put Hitler and Himmler to shame.
Throwing burning liquid-gell on women and children and burning them alive is not justifiable, regardless of how pertinent it was to stop Communism.
If the Nazis were Napalming people there would be no excuses for their behavior, so why is there for America?
In fact, the Nazis goal was to destroy Communism in a war against USSR (while the US actively armed and built up Soviet arms industry), except that they also believed in keeping the land their soldiers died fighting for. Not very different from all nations that have expanded their borders historically, this includes America.
Now you might argue "but they used Blitzkrieg so that makes them worse". Then does using Napalm on villages make America even more evil? Because the Nazis didn't have Napalm, or atomic bombs.
Because somehow the Nazis are alot worse than American colonists only because they used tanks and planes?
Then are American colonists & pioneers more evil than Ghengis Khan because they used muskets, rifles and canons?
I think that is relative. For me, Hitler at best was just another European imperialist. There is nothing exceptional about Hitler in his "evilness". In fact he's an average in that regard, and you are free to disagree.
I have no reason to hate Hitler because he never colonized my part of the world, and rather did a big favor for us by demolishing Britain and French empires (albeit after they declared war on him first).
Do Israelis hate Churchill for what he did to my part of the world? No, they build his statues.
Do Americans hate Stalin for what he did to Chechen Muslims? No, they could care less.
Similarly, I too could care less how "evil" Hitler was or what he did to whom.
And if I must consider him evil on the basis that he killed innocent civilians
during a war, then his chief adversaries surpass his "evilness" because they have killed far more people
during peace time, let alone during war (for example, America has not declared war on any of the countries it has intervened in since WW2, or Stalin murdering millions of his own people, or Mao murdering millions of his own people).
This exceptionalizing of Hitler is mostly due to a powerful propaganda machine that even Goebbels could only fantasize about, nothing more.
Genghis Khan was a ruthless man and murdered millions in greater proportion to the weapons of his time, but Mogonolians are not guilted for their history only because Genghis Khan is not a useful propaganda tool for today's political movers.
Well, again based on his private conversations where he spoke his mind openly with his close circle of staff, he clearly states that the name is not significant to him on a personal level but only as a propaganda tool should the Germans be able to capture the city. So I have no reason to believe that the name of the city was significant to Hitler on a personal level.
I believe he stated that to counter Anglo-American propaganda intended to foster doubts within the German population about their leadership. Just standard protocol of all the pariticipants in that war. Propaganda and counter propaganda.
For example, here Hitler is responding to American propaganda that Hitler wants to take over Palestine, among other nations, while he points out the hypocrisy of the allies when in fact Palestine was occupied by the British:
So I doubt he pointed out Stalingrad's insignificance out of some kind of insecurity.