@Mikhail No. Treason is the one and only crime that's actually defined in the constitution, and the definition makes it pretty clear that to qualify, you have to either directly aid the enemy during time of war, or you have to yourself actually take up arms against the United States. To put this in perspective, when Aaron Burr tried to start his rebellion, a couple of his top helpers bought up weapons to arm people to attack the US and try to overthrow the government.
They were tried for treason and found not guilty, because although they were buying arms and trying to support armed rebellion against the US, they didn't themselves actually try to use the arms to rebel and they didn't successfully arm the people they were trying to either. But even if they'd gotten the weapons to the rebels, they probably would have been not guilty, unless they also joined in the actual fighting (if it had happened).