No, he did not. Washington wanted the US to stay neutral.
George Washington
George Washington (1789 - 1797), who was succeeded by John Adams (1797 - 1801).
French and Indian war
The Emancipation Proclamation - declaring freedom for all slaves in Confederate states. As a Proclamation, not a Law, it could not directly free any slaves. It sounded more like a human rights appeal. But it was in fact a shrewd tactical move by Lincoln to keep the British and French from sending aid to the Confederates. After the Proclamation, they could no longer do this without looking pro-slavery themsevles.
During the French-British war, President Washington favored the British side. This explains why President Washington sent John Jay to save Great Britain.
It was Louis XVI
President George Washington strongly discouraged forming permanent alliances because he did not want America to be drawn into Europe's affairs. The Franco-American Alliance, which was formed in the midst of the American Revolution, was annulled in 1793 when Washington gave the Neutrality Proclamation Speech, which kept America neutral in the French Revolution.
he believed the american declaring independence was the cause.
There wasn't one. The French and Indian war lasted from 1754 to 1763. George Washington was the first president in 1789.
Washington worried that being drawn into a European conflict would hurt the new nation. He issued a Proclamation of Neutrality that warned against the United States' involvement in foreign affairs.
In a nutshell. Washington realized the US was in no position to take on Great Britain by supporting the French during the French Revolution. He also did not want to completely abandon the French, by remaining neutral he kept the British from declaring war on the US, and by not siding with Britain he gave some moral support to the French Revolution. Keep in mind that his neutrality policy only worked for so long, shortly after he left office following administrations went with different policies, which eventually brought the US into the war in 1811-1812. See related link at the bottom.
The problems that the nation faced during Washington's presidency was remaining neutral, the neutrality proclamation, the French question, Jay's and Pickney's treaties, and the conflicts in the Northwest Territory.