The current answers does not quite cut it!
It is true that the redirect will wait until the fbevents.js has loaded. It does however not wait for the fbq events to be sent, which is what you would want out of this solution.
Here are two examples on how Chrome handles your proposal on an extremely slow connection and on 3G:


In the first example Facebook does not even have the time to initiate the tracking request before redirecting. In the 2nd example it does mange to initiate it, but Chrome cancels the tracking, because of the pending redirect.
It would be easy if Facebook would supply a Callback like Google Analytics does, but as of the time of writing, it does not currently offer callback functionality.
There are plenty of solutions on the Web that simply use a fixed setTimeout to redirect after, say, a second. But this solution poses two kinds of problems:
- It does not work when the connection is way slower then expected. In that case the redirect will still happen before the track. So you will loose data!
- It forces users on fast connections to wait for your arbitrary timer to pass before they are redirected!
What you can do though to achieve the desired effect is a complete Hack, and I would love if Facebook would finally implement the Callback, so use this with care:
Note: I used two libraries for this (jQuery and imagesLoaded). You could probably do it without those, but I choose the easy route and do not mind the overhead that much.
<html>
<head>
// Header Stuff
<script>
// Regular Facebook Pixel Code (Does not need to be modified with async!)
</script>
<script src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.3.1.min.js" integrity="sha256-FgpCb/KJQlLNfOu91ta32o/NMZxltwRo8QtmkMRdAu8=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/imagesloaded@4/imagesloaded.pkgd.min.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<!-- You should provide a Fallback Button here in case automatic redirect fails! -->
<img id="pixelLoad" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr/">
<script>
$(function()
{
$("#pixelLoad").imagesLoaded().done(function(inst)
{
setTimeout(function(){ window.location.href='someURL'; },100);
});
});
</script>
</body>
This loads the exact tracking image from Facebook that is used in their fbq method, thus allowing to compensate for slow connection to the Facebook server. Sadly you have to use the image and cannot use a simple AJAX request, as Facebook's Origin-Policy does not allow this.
Here is an example on how Chrome handles the redirect and the Facebook Pixel requests after the change:

It seems that this allows the Browser to correctly queue the redirect, so it happens after the pixel tracking events. I have not tried this with legacy browsers, so I will repeat myself: Exercise caution when using this Code!
EDIT:
Edge and Firefox show similar behavior and this solution does seem to work with them as well.