Let $ G $ be the real points of a linear algebraic group and $ G' $ a Zariski closed subgroup. Then is $ G/G' $ a Cartesian product $$ (K/K') \times F $$ where $ F $ is contractible? Here $ K,K' $ are maximal compacts of $ G,G' $.
Some relevant information: Let $ G,G' $ be Lie groups with finitely many connected components (for example the real points of linear algebraic groups). They can be expressed as cartesian products $$ G= K \times E\, , \, G'=K' \times E' $$ where $ K,K' $ are maximal compacts and $ E,E' $ are contractible. According to [Mostow, G. D., Covariant fiberings of Klein spaces II, Amer. J. Math. 84 (1962), 466–474] $ G/G' $ is of the form $$ G/G' \cong K \times_{K'} F $$ where $ F \times E' \cong E $ and the $ \times_{K'} $ means taking the Cartesian product but then identifying $$ (k_0,f_0) \sim (k_0k,kf_0k^{-1}) $$ for all $ k \in K' $. We can essentially summarize this by saying that $ G/G' $ is a $ K' $ homogeneous vector bundle over $ K/K' $.
Follow-up: Great answer. Exactly what I wanted. $ SO_3(\mathbb{C})/SO_2(\mathbb{C}) $ is the normal bundle over the 2 sphere (so 4 dimensional) and is nontrivial. Upon further reflection I found a less beautiful but more minimal counterexample. $ SE_2(\mathbb{R}) $ is a linear algebraic group. There is a Zariski closed subgroup given by taking $ x_{1,1}x_{2,2}=1 $ and $ x_{1,3}=0 $ and the quotient is the Moebius strip.