OPINION

We Have Not Forgotten About American Hostage Dennis Coyle

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

The United States has entered a new era when it comes to bringing Americans home. Under President Trump's leadership, this administration has made the release of American hostages and detainees a top priority.

That commitment has already brought Americans home. Today, I am demanding the immediate release of Dennis Coyle, whom the Taliban has been holding in Afghanistan since January 2025, in solitary confinement without charge or due process.

Dennis Coyle, whose family is from Arizona, is not a headline. He is not a bargaining chip. He is a son, a brother, an uncle, and I gave his family my word that I would use every tool available to me and every ounce of my platform to advocate for Dennis's safe and immediate return.

A nation proves its character by how fiercely it protects its people. When an American is wrongfully detained overseas, we must act with urgency and strength. America must be relentless when one of our own is wrongfully held overseas. No bureaucracy, no diplomatic hesitation, and no beltway political calculation should outweigh the moral obligation to bring our citizens home. America First means no Americans left behind.

I saw firsthand the human cost of hostage taking and unlawful detention. I successfully advocated for Elizabeth Tsurkov's recent return; she survived 903 days in the clutches of Hezbollah in Iraq. Hearing her story reinforced something I have long believed. These are not abstract geopolitical cases; these are human beings who endured fear, isolation, and uncertainty every single day. Their families live in constant anguish, caught between hope and dread with every passing week.

When you sit across from someone who has survived captivity, you understand that time is not neutral. Delay is not harmless. Every minute, every hour, and every day matters for Dennis.

My commitment to this issue is not new. I have pushed for the return of Kayla Mueller's body from Syria, so her family in Prescott, Arizona, can finally have closure and lay her to rest. America cannot claim to honor its citizens if we leave them behind, whether alive or deceased. Our duty does not expire. Our responsibility does not fade with news cycles. And with President Trump and his envoys such as Sebastian Gorka, Ambassador Ric Grennell, Ambassador Tom Barrack, and Adam Boehler, we continue to turn the page on the previous administration's weak foreign policy. The same moral clarity applies to Dennis Coyle's case right now.

The consequences of past weakness linger. But there is a new president now, and this administration has made clear through action that hostage-taking will not be rewarded and that leverage, not concession, will define American policy.

The Trump Administration has shown that peace through strength works. Serious diplomacy backed by leverage works. Hostage takers and rogue actors respond when the United States demonstrates that there is a real price to pay for holding our citizens. That's why I cosponsored numerous bills, such as the No Paydays for Hostage-Takers Act. This approach must continue, and it must intensify until Dennis Coyle is on a plane home to his family in Arizona.

This is not partisan. Every member of Congress should stand behind a simple demand: release Dennis Coyle now. Send him home to his mother and sisters in Arizona.

I am calling on all relevant agencies and international partners to make this case an immediate priority.

To those holding Dennis: We know who you are. America is watching. I will not rest until he is home. We will say his name and not allow his case to fade into silence. Keeping an American citizen from his family is not leverage. It is injustice.

To the Coyle family, I want you to know that you are not alone. I will continue to raise Dennis's case publicly and privately. I will continue to press for action. I will continue to keep my promise to you.

America does not abandon its people. Not in Syria's deserts. Not in Gaza's dark tunnels. Not in prisons in Kabul. Not in foreign hands. We bring them home. Dennis Coyle must be returned to his family immediately. Nothing less is acceptable.

U.S. Congressman Abraham J. Hamadeh represents Arizona's 8th Congressional District and serves on the U.S. House Armed Services Committee.