In my view, No. Germany did not anticipate that the US would involve it's self in a distant war, one whose ideology, (ie totalitarianism was more or less condonned), which it was very reluctant to do, and only the prior knolledge of a provoked and impending Japanese attack on the US fleet based at Pearl Harbor, allowed Roosevelt the necessary reason to bring the public 'on-side' by providing a massive and external threat to homeland security. Never the less, Hitler I think Herr Hitler lost little sleep over American involvement.
During the cold war the American isolationism really extended from the Soviet Union to Latin America. This trend has since changed.
The instalation of Hitler and WW2
continue american isolationism by ending the lend lease program
Isolationism
germeny in ww2
Japanese suprise attack on Pearl Harbor Hawaii 07 Dec 1941
huge number of paid member, almost 800,000 and opposed aid to the Allies in WW2
Isolationism
During the cold war the American isolationism really extended from the Soviet Union to Latin America. This trend has since changed.
No
maybe
American isolationism A lack of political alliances The rise of fascism
Isolationism in the Philippines was born from debates surrounding the Spanish-American War, and the US annexation of the Philippines. Isolationism is the policy of remaining apart from the political affairs of other countries.
No, B/c American has help on world.
The policy of the US Government at the onset of both world wars was Isolationism
Isolationism
Only to outside the Western Hemisphere.