More than likely, fumes are coming in some other way. I thought RV air conditioners were closed systems, meaning, they only circulate air from inside the camper, unlike home window air conditioners that have a switch to flip so you can draw air from outside.
As stated above, campgrounds are not healthy if you don't have strong tolerances form fumes, smoke, smells, noise and light (Kind of makes anyone ask the question, why do we go there then?)
Funny, but true story:
Several years ago (our first TT) we were in a private campground that was located in a shallow valley, surrounded by trees in every direction, and a river running through it. No wind at all. Campground full. Evening, sun going down. Peaceful. Hot! Seems like everyone had a campfire that night.
Next thing you know, our smoke alarm went off in the camper as the campfire smoke was going right in the camper. Then the camper beside us, theirs went off. I looked up and the whole campground was filled with smoke. No air movement, like a fog, and getting thicker.
Then someone elses went off, then another, then another, and then another. People were scrambling to their campers by now to pull their smoke alarms and rip out the batteries to get them quiet. I did the same thing. It was comical, but then I realized, there wasn't a breath of fresh air anywhere, and realized how much we all were choking and coughing and couldn't get away from it.
We went inside, shut all the windows, turned on the air conditioner until we could breathe easier. We didn't go back outside that evening.
True story.