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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 08:46 UTC
  • UTC08:46
  • EDT04:46
  • GMT09:46
  • CET10:46
  • JST17:46
  • HKT16:46
← The MonexusOpinion

The Spectacle of State Power: What Mountain Home Tells Us About Military Public Relations

The mid-air collision at Mountain Home Air Force Base exposes the structural contradictions of military air shows: the Pentagon uses civilian spectacles to sell its budget while keeping weapons systems under wraps everywhere else.

@mehrnews · Telegram

On 17 May 2026, two US Navy aircraft collided in mid-air during the Gunfighter Skies air show at Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho. All four crew members ejected safely. The aircraft — initially reported as F-18 Hornets and later identified as EA-18G Growler electronic warfare variants of the Super Hornet family — were performing before a civilian crowd when the collision occurred. No ground casualties were reported. The incident is under investigation by Naval Safety Center authorities.

That all four crew members walked away is genuinely fortunate. But the near-miss — a collision between two of the most sophisticated electronic warfare platforms in the US fleet, in full view of a paying public audience — raises a question the Pentagon's public affairs office will not answer directly: why are we watching weapons systems perform tricks in peacetime?

The Performance Imperative

Military air shows are not accidents of tradition. They are structural products of a defense establishment that depends on public acceptance — and public funding — to sustain its scale. The logic runs through several interlocking channels. First, the shows serve as direct recruitment pipelines. The services report that air show attendees enlist at higher rates than the general population. Second, they provide unfiltered access to hardware that would otherwise be classified or restricted — a Growler flying a barrel roll over Idaho communicates something to a defense contractor's shareholders, a senator on the appropriations committee, and a teenager in a lawn chair that no press release can replicate. Third, the spectacle generates local economic activity that makes host communities reluctant to refuse the Pentagon access.

What the shows sell, in other words, is normalcy. Warship visits, flyovers, parachute demonstrations — these rituals accustom civilian populations to the presence of military force in civic life. They make the extraordinary ordinary.

The Operational Contradiction

Here is the structural tension the Mountain Home collision has made visible. The Pentagon operates the most secretive large institution in the United States. Its procurement budgets, operational deployments, target lists, and casualty figures are routinely classified or restricted beyond what most democratic allies would consider transparent. Drone strike assessments, civilian harm documentation, and cyber operations remain outside public view.

Yet the same institution parks nuclear-capable aircraft at civilian airports and flies them within metres of each other for the entertainment of crowds that include children, journalists, and foreign nationals. The operational security concerns that justify restricting satellite imagery of the same aircraft on a tarmac evaporate entirely when the audience is large enough.

This is not hypocrisy in the moralistic sense. It is functional inconsistency — the institution has decided, at some level, that the reputational and recruitment benefits of public spectacle outweigh the security costs. That calculation should be examined directly, not buried under gratitude that nobody died in Idaho.

Competing Frameworks

The defense establishment's preferred framing of air shows is straightforward: they are community outreach. The aircraft represent American technological superiority. The pilots are elite professionals demonstrating precision. The events build goodwill between the military and the public it serves. In this reading, the Mountain Home collision is an operational anomaly — a failure of execution, not a failure of concept.

The counter-framing — held by aviation safety advocates, some former military officers, and urban planners who study the land-use implications of basing decisions — argues that the risk calculus for air shows has never been adequately disclosed to the communities that host them. Proximity to civilian populations means that the worst-case scenario at any major show is not a controlled ejection in an empty field. It is a Tin Village: a replay of the 1988 Ramstein disaster in which 70 people died when a strafing run demonstration went wrong.

The Pentagon's internal safety data on air show incidents is not publicly available in aggregate form. What is available suggests that the near-miss rate is higher than public perception holds — pilots routinely report close calls that never reach civilian attention because ejection was not required.

The Structural Takeaway

If this publication were to draw a single structural conclusion from the Mountain Home incident, it would be this: the Pentagon's appetite for public spectacle is a policy choice with documented downside risk, and that choice has never been subjected to the kind of structured cost-benefit analysis that would be required before, say, approving a new weapons platform. Air shows persist because the benefits accrue visibly to the institution — recruitment figures, congressional goodwill, contractor visibility — while the risks are diffuse and probabilistic. When the numbers work out badly enough, as they did at Ramstein in 1988, the institutional response is procedural reform, not structural reconsideration.

That asymmetry is not unique to the US military. Defense establishments across NATO, in Russia, in China, and in India use public displays of hardware for the same suite of purposes. The Mountain Home collision is an opportunity to ask, in the open, whether those purposes justify the exposure — not just for the crew who ejected safely on 17 May, but for the crowds who lined up to watch.

This publication covered the Mountain Home collision as a breaking incident. Monexus will continue to track the Naval Safety Center investigation as findings become available.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/osintlive/4523
  • https://t.me/disclosetv/12451
  • https://t.me/englishabuali/18421
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire