The TOI correspondent from Washington:
Tragedy struck with brutal finality at the Dubai airshow when an Indian Air Force Tejas fighter jet crashed during a negative-G manoeuvre, killing Wing Commander Namansh Syal and plunging the biennial spectacle into grief. Hours later, a heartfelt Instagram post from US F-16 demonstration pilot Taylor “FEMA” Hiester cut through the noise, emerging as a stark reminder of the bond that unites aviators across flags and frontiers. Hiester, a captain with US Air Force’s Thunderbirds-inspired demo team, was prepping for his own routine when the Tejas went down and erupted in flames. His reflective post – shared with 150,000 followers – captured shock, sorrow and solidarity. He revealed that his team chose to withdraw from their final performance, a rare step in a world driven by tight schedules and multimillion-dollar deals.”Though the show made the shocking decision to continue with the flying schedule, our team along with a few others made the decision to cancel our final performance out of respect to the pilot, his colleagues and family,” Hiester, 34, wrote.He described walking past the Tejas crew, motionless beside an “empty parking spot”, ladder still on the ramp, the pilot’s belongings untouched in his rental car. “I suppose each of us contemplated their new reality that came in an instant,” he added – an image that distilled the dread every fighter pilot carries into the cockpit.As the airshow pressed ahead with upbeat announcements, Hiester felt uneasy. Crowds cheered, sponsors were thanked, and a closing line – “Congratulations to all of our sponsors… we’ll see you in 2027” – clashed sharply with the grief still hanging over the tarmac. “It was uncomfortable for me for a lot of reasons, some of them selfish,” he wrote, imagining his own team breaking down their gear amid blaring music and carnival energy.That dissonance became a “gift”: a reminder that beyond rockstar treatment and sponsor demands, what endures are the teammates who become family, he wrote. “The people you invest in, the people that you love and the people that love you back… will be the only way you live past your own individual end,” Hiester concluded.The Texas-born F-16 Viper pilot with over 1,500 flight hours has become an emblem of the global aviator brotherhood – one in which an American ace grieves an Indian pilot with the intimacy of shared skies. Tributes filled forums and pilot circles. “Humanity and camaraderie is still alive. Long live the brotherhood of men in uniform,” wrote one user.
