It is well known that the distribution of simple random walks on $bf{Z}$ conditioned on returning to the origin after $2n$ steps does not depend on $p= P(S_1 = 1)$, the probability of moving to the right. Moreover, conditioned on ${S_{2n}=0}$ the maximal displacement $max_{kleq 2n} |S_k|$ converges in distribution when scaled by $sqrt{n}$ (diffusive scaling). We consider the analogous problem for transient random walks in random environments on $bf{Z}$. We show that under the quenched law $P_omega$ (conditioned on the environment $omega$), the maximal displacement of the random walk when conditioned to return to the origin at time $2n$ is no longer necessarily of the order $sqrt{n}$. If the environment is nestling (both positive and negative local drifts exist) then the maximal displacement conditioned on returning to the origin at time $2n$ is of order $n^{kappa/(kappa+1)}$, where the constant $kappa>0$ depends on the law on environment. On the other hand, if the environment is marginally nestling or non-nestling (only non-negative local drifts) then the maximal displacement conditioned on returning to the origin at time $2n$ is at least $n^{1-varepsilon}$ and at most $n/(ln n)^{2-varepsilon}$ for any $varepsilon>0$. As a consequence of our proofs, we obtain precise rates of decay for $P_omega(X_{2n}=0)$. In particular, for certain non-nestling environments we show that $P_omega(X_{2n}=0) = exp{-Cn -Cn/(ln n)^2 + o(n/(ln n)^2) }$ with explicit constants $C,C>0$.