“I fell asleep with your left boob in my hand for the better part of ten years. Mistakes may happen.” — Hal Wyler
Kate and Hal Wyler in The Diplomat embody marriage as a high-wire act: thrilling, treacherous, and utterly addictive. She’s considering sending him packing right from the first episode and then turning to him for counsel the next. He’s sabotaging her moves – sometimes unintentionally – and then masterminding big wins for her. Their banter crackles with tension, but Season 2’s closer revealed the deeper truth binding them when Kate shared her marital frustrations with her long-time friend in the CIA.
“You want him to behave. But when he does, you don’t see it. You can’t even detect it. I worry sometimes that you don’t like it. You don’t like him when he’s good.”
Kate’s default mode with Hal? Pure frustration. She’s exhausted by his antics and the endless cleanup they demand. Watching the show, I sided with her—mostly. Sure, unlike Kate, I spot Hal’s genuine efforts to shape up, but I get why she assumes the worst: that’s their decade-plus history. Kate’s no fool; she’d dial back the ire if he weren’t so reliably infuriating.
Yet woven through the frustration is a profound partnership. Hal’s devotion is rock-solid; he believes in her, stays (mostly) loyal (that Dennison sister fling was ‘somehow’, but their moral code seems unique and Kate rolls with it), and relentlessly pushes her forward. Kate’s care for him shines too, laced with exasperation he rarely mirrors. Remember the fight that fizzled out when Hal couldn’t untie his shoes because of his injuries from the bombing? She jumped in to help to help. It’s instinctive and made me think about how acts of kindness even when fighting makes all the difference.
Even as Kate admits she can’t fully trust him, she spills everything—seeking his take, even if just to dunk on it. Her friend’s line nails it: Hal’s chaos fuels her. Otherwise, why hasn’t she divorced him yet?
Sure, you could hate someone and stick it out for several reasons: co-dependency, toxicity, or lives too tangled to untie. Or consider this: it’s the gritty reality of a long-term marriage under diplomatic high stakes, where every call ripples outward. No one gets held to saintly standards amid the fallout.
“Someday… you’re gonna say, ‘I gave you a lot of shit… but I kind of get it now. The cost of doing business.'” – Hal Wyler
Kate sees the toll but faults Hal for embracing it too casually. He’s nonchalant about collateral damage; she’s not. Enter UK’s Foreign Minister, Dennison, the “good man” with the moral compass Hal lacks. But would Kate still idolize him in the trenches? His caution might curdle into passivity, forcing her into the villain role. With Hal, she claims the high ground, and maybe that’s the spark.
Whatever the alchemy, their conflicts mesmerize without melodrama, making me root for them instead of rolling my eyes. The writing stays gloriously unbiased, letting us love (or hate) both. If you’ve been watching, what’s your take. If you haven’t, you absolutely should get in on it. I’ll spare Season 3 spoilers though; it’s a wild ride for the uninitiated.


