Two US Navy EA-18G Growlers Collide Mid-Air at Idaho Airshow, Pilots Eject Safely
Two US Navy EA-18G Growler jets from the Growler Demo Team collided mid-air during the Gunfighter Skies airshow at Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho on 17 May 2026; all four crew members ejected safely.
Two US Navy EA-18G Growler jets collided mid-air over Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho on the evening of 17 May 2026, during a routine pass at the Gunfighter Skies airshow. Emergency response teams were immediately dispatched to the crash site. Announcers at the venue informed attendees that all four crew members had successfully ejected. No fatalities have been reported.
What happened at Mountain Home
The collision occurred at approximately 19:06 UTC during the Growler Demo Team's performance at the annual Gunfighter Skies event, a public airshow held at the Idaho air base that hosts civilian and military aviation displays. Live social media dispatches from attendees described a mid-air impact between two aircraft followed by an explosion and debris field. First responders were seen converging on the base perimeter within minutes of the incident. The announcer's confirmation that all four crew members ejected — four parachutes reportedly opened — was relayed to the crowd as the wreckage lay in an unpopulated area of the base.
Emergency response and initial scope of damage
Fire and rescue units from the base and local Boise County emergency services responded to the crash site. The exact condition of the aircraft wreckage, and whether the crash caused any damage to base infrastructure or civilian property beyond the facility, had not been formally assessed as of publication. The sources do not specify whether any base personnel, spectators, or residents were injured in the incident beyond the four ejected crew members.
Aviation safety implications for demo flights
The Growler Demo Team performs a structured aerobatic routine that involves close-formation passes and mirroring maneuvers between two aircraft. Such routines carry inherent proximity risk even under ideal conditions, and mid-air collisions during airshow demonstrations — while rare — are not without precedent in US military aviation history. The safety of demonstration flights depends on precise coordination, restricted airspace, and real-time weather assessment. Details of the weather conditions and any mechanical or procedural factors that may have contributed to the collision have not yet been released by US Navy authorities.
What comes next: investigation and recovery
The US Navy and Air Force will conduct a formal investigation into the cause of the collision. Standard protocol following an aviation mishap of this kind involves the convening of a flight safety investigation board, wreckage analysis, and review of cockpit and ground communications recordings. The Growler Demo Team schedule — and whether remaining performances at Gunfighter Skies will proceed — remains unconfirmed. The Growler, a specialized electronic warfare variant of the F/A-18 Super Hornet, represents a significant asset for the Navy's carrier-based electronic attack mission; the loss of two aircraft represents a substantial financial and operational impact independent of the human outcomes.
This publication's coverage draws from live Telegram and X wire reports filed from the Mountain Home Air Force Base perimeter beginning at 19:06 UTC on 17 May 2026. No official statement from US Navy Public Affairs had been published as of filing. Monexus will update this report as formal confirmation becomes available.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/osintlive/3842
- https://t.me/osintlive/3841
- https://t.me/englishabuali/1143
- https://x.com/sprinterpress/status/1923345670129238059
- https://t.me/euronews/2290
- https://t.me/Pravda_Gerashchenko/9912
