Ah, I haven't been to either country, but I was referring to the societal norms and customs around "being female" in the US vs elsewhere and casually noting the countries with the least gender inequality.
For example, I grew up in the UK and I am comfortably cisgender. My experience of being female in the UK is wildly different than the experiences of being female I read about in the US - basically, the US reads to me like a dystopian novel. Full on Handmaid's Tale. My husband and I were talking about future holiday destinations and both crossed the US off our list: we don't even want to visit there, let alone live there, because why would anyone?
So if you're saying that your gender dysphoria specifically relates to gender experience in the US and that same gender experience is not the same elsewhere, then it's surely worth exploring whether you have country dysphoria instead.