American academic Dennis Coyle was freed by the Taliban after 14 months — a story that would normally dominate the news cycle, buried by the Iran war.
The New York Times, BBC, and AP all covered the release — but none led with it, all running it below the Iran war fold.
A few political accounts noted the release; the dominant reaction was silence — the story never trended, never became a main character moment.
Dennis Coyle, a 64-year-old American academic and linguist from Pueblo, Colorado, arrived at a U.S. base in Texas on March 25 after being held by the Taliban for over fourteen months. Afghanistan's Taliban government released him on March 24, calling it a goodwill gesture tied to Eid al-Fitr. Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed the release. [1]
Coyle was detained by the Taliban's General Directorate of Intelligence in January 2025. He was never charged with a specific crime. The State Department designated Afghanistan a "State Sponsor of Wrongful Detention" during his captivity. His congressman, Abe Hamadeh, said he had worked directly with the administration to secure the release. [2]
In any other news cycle, this would be a front-page story. An American citizen held without charges by the Taliban for over a year, freed through diplomatic back channels, reunited with his family at a military base — that is the kind of narrative that produces press conferences, cable news countdowns, and presidential statements. [3]
Instead, Coyle's release landed on the same day the Pentagon signed wartime munitions contracts and drones hit Kuwait's airport. The hierarchy of American attention has a strict sorting function, and a war with Iran outranks everything, including the Americans it is supposed to protect.
-- Charles Ashford, London