A U.S. citizen held in Afghanistan has been freed, the Taliban said Tuesday.
Dennis Coyle, 64, was released after a letter from his family was sent requesting his release on the occasion of Eid Al-Fitr, the Taliban foreign ministry said. His period of detention was then deemed “sufficient” and his release was approved by a court, according to the ministry.
The Taliban claimed Coyle had been detained for “violating the applicable laws of Afghanistan.”
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The U.S. government designated Coyle as wrongfully detained.
“Today, after more than a year of captivity in Afghanistan, Dennis Coyle is on his way home. President Trump is committed to ending unjust detentions overseas – Dennis joins over 100 Americans who have been freed in the past 15 months under his second term in office,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in statement Tuesday.
Coyle is an academic from Pueblo, Colorado, who had been detained in Afghanistan since Jan. 27, 2025, according to a website set up by his family.
He first arrived in Afghanistan in the early 2000s, where he has worked to survey Afghanistan’s linguistic diversity and help communities develop resources in their own languages, according to his family.

Mudassir Safi/AP
The Taliban thanked the United Arab Emirates for helping to facilitate Coyle’s release.
Earlier this month, U.S. special envoy for hostage response Adam Boehler said three innocent Americans were currently being held in Afghanistan.
“While this is a positive step by the Taliban, more work needs to be done. We are still seeking the immediate return of Mahmood Habibi, Paul Overby, and all other unjustly detained Americans. The Taliban must end their practice of hostage diplomacy,” Rubio added.
The family of Habibi applauded the release of Coyle in a statement Tuesday.
“We hope that our family will soon have the same feeling of relief, when Mahmood is returned home to us. The US Government has overwhelming evidence that the Taliban’s General Directorate of Intelligence arrested my brother. Taliban denials of this obvious fact make it impossible for the people of Afghanistan to get the foreign assistance they need,” Ahmad Habibi, Mahmood Habibi’s brother, said in a statement Tuesday.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
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