Taliban Releases U.S. Academic Dennis Coyle After More Than a Year in Custody as Rubio Uses New Wrongful‑Detention Powers
The Taliban released U.S. academic Dennis Coyle after more than a year in custody — he was seized by the Taliban’s intelligence service from his Kabul home in January 2025 and held without charge in near‑solitary confinement, U.S. Special Envoy for Hostage Affairs Adam Boehler and Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, with photos showing Coyle departing Kabul alongside former U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and the UAE ambassador. Rubio, who recently designated Afghanistan a “state sponsor of wrongful detention” under new U.S. powers and publicly pressed for Coyle’s release, thanked the UAE and Qatar for mediation even as Kabul framed the release as an Eid gesture and other Americans remain unaccounted for.
📌 Key Facts
- On March 24, 2026, the Taliban released U.S. academic Dennis Coyle after more than a year in custody; U.S. officials including Special Envoy Adam Boehler and Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed he is 'on his way home' and he was photographed departing Kabul airport with former U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and the UAE ambassador to Kabul.
- Coyle was detained by the Taliban’s General Directorate of Intelligence in January 2025 and held for more than a year without charge in near‑solitary confinement, and according to his family he lacked access to medical care.
- U.S. Special Envoy for Hostage Affairs Adam Boehler said Coyle 'committed no crime and was used as leverage.'
- About two weeks before the release, Secretary of State Marco Rubio designated Afghanistan a 'state sponsor of wrongful detention' under a September executive order that allows sanctions, travel restrictions and other measures; Rubio publicly pressed for Coyle’s release, thanked the UAE and Qatar for mediation, called the release 'a positive step towards ending the practice of hostage diplomacy,' and said Coyle is one of 'over 100' Americans freed in the past 15 months of the administration.
- Afghan authorities framed Coyle’s release as an Eid al‑Fitr gesture, saying their Supreme Court deemed his prior imprisonment 'sufficient' while continuing to assert he violated Afghan laws; Kabul has rejected U.S. accusations of engaging in 'hostage diplomacy.'
- U.S. officials and reporters noted unresolved American cases in Afghanistan, specifically businessman Mahmood Habibi (abducted in Kabul in August 2022 and believed by his family and the FBI to be held by the Taliban, which denies this) and researcher Paul Overby (missing since May 2014); Rubio is publicly pressing for their release.
📊 Relevant Data
The Afghan immigrant population in the United States nearly quadrupled from approximately 54,000 in 2010 to 195,000 in 2022, and has since grown to exceed 230,000 by 2024, with significant increases following the 2021 Taliban takeover.
Afghan Immigrants in the United States — Migration Policy Institute
Failure to secure permanent immigration status for approximately 36,000 Afghan refugees in the U.S. could result in a loss of more than $1.7 billion in potential earnings to the U.S. economy over time.
New Report: Failure to Secure Immigration Status of 36,000 Afghan Refugees Could Cost the U.S. Economy More Than 1.7B in Potential Earnings — Upwardly Global
As of September 2025, at least 40 U.S. nationals were reported as being held hostage or wrongfully detained abroad.
Trump executive order targets nations that detain U.S. citizens — The Washington Post
The rapid influx of Afghan immigrants post-2021 has raised concerns about economic and cultural impacts on American communities, including pressures on housing and local resources in states like California, Texas, and Virginia where many have settled.
The Economic and Cultural Challenges of Afghan Immigration — Center for Immigration Studies
📰 Source Timeline (6)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Confirms Coyle is 'on his way home' and reiterates he is an academic originally from Colorado who spent about two decades in Afghanistan researching local languages and kept a home in Kabul.
- Specifies that Coyle was detained by the Taliban’s General Directorate of Intelligence in January 2025, held without charge in near‑solitary confinement and without access to medical care, according to his family.
- Details that Afghanistan was designated a 'state sponsor of wrongful detention' about two weeks before the release under a Trump September executive order that lets the secretary of state impose sanctions, travel restrictions and other limits on countries that wrongfully detain U.S. citizens, with Iran designated first last month.
- Reports Rubio’s new public statement on X calling the release 'a positive step towards ending the practice of hostage diplomacy' and explicitly thanking the United Arab Emirates for securing the release and Qatar for its continued role.
- Names other specific Americans Rubio is now publicly pressing the Taliban to release: businessman Mahmood Habibi, abducted in Kabul in August 2022, and writer Paul Overby, last seen in Khost City in May 2014.
- Afghan Foreign Ministry frames Coyle’s release as an Eid al-Fitr gesture after the Supreme Court deemed his prior imprisonment 'sufficient,' while still asserting he violated Afghan laws.
- Article notes the U.S. State Department’s recent designation of Afghanistan as a 'sponsor of wrongful detention' and Kabul’s explicit rejection of U.S. accusations of 'hostage diplomacy.'
- Both Rubio and Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi publicly thank the United Arab Emirates and mention Qatar’s role in mediating Coyle’s release and confirm a Kabul meeting between Muttaqi and former U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad.
- The piece highlights at least two unresolved U.S. cases: missing contractor/businessman Mahmood Habibi, believed by his family and the FBI to be held by the Taliban (which Kabul denies), and researcher Paul Overby, missing since 2014.
- Rubio claims Coyle is one of 'over 100' Americans freed in the past 15 months of Trump’s second term, tying this case to a broader administration narrative on unjust detentions.
- Confirms visually and textually that Dennis Coyle departed via Kabul airport, pictured with former U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad and the UAE ambassador to Kabul, Saif Mohammed Al-Ketbi.
- Attributes the announcement of Coyle’s return explicitly to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, quoting him as saying Coyle is 'on his way home.'
- Identifies the Taliban government as the entity saying it released Coyle, clarifying that this was framed as an official act by the current Afghan authorities.
- U.S. Special Envoy for Hostage Affairs Adam Boehler confirms that Dennis Coyle has been released and is on his way home.
- Boehler states that Coyle was held for more than a year in near-solitary confinement after being taken by Taliban intelligence from his Kabul home in January 2025.
- Boehler asserts that Coyle 'committed no crime and was used as leverage.'
- The piece reiterates that Secretary of State Marco Rubio last month designated Afghanistan a 'state sponsor of wrongful detention' and publicly pressed for Coyle’s release.