It wounded two more people, said police spokesman Haji Yaqoob of Khost province.
The bomber attempted to
enter a village where coalition forces were conducting training
exercises with Afghan police, but officers at a checkpoint recognized
his explosive vest and stopped him, police said.
The training session had convened near the checkpoint, and Yaqoob believes it was the target.
In a separate incident
Saturday, a suicide bomber on a bicycle detonated himself at a gate to
the Afghan defense ministry in Kabul hours after newly appointed U.S.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel landed in the Afghan capital. Hagel was
not in the area at them time of the explosion.
The secretary is in
Afghanistan to visit American troops and get the lay of the land in the
restive country to better advise President Barack Obama.
Hagel emphasized that the
United States is still at war in Afghanistan despite the current
mission to transition into a role of "training, assistance and advice."
This is the latest suicide attack in the nation.
A car bomber drove up to
a U.S. military base in Khost province in December, but did not make it
past the gate. The vehicle's detonation killed three people -- a
security guard and two truck drivers.
Coalition forces in Khost are moving from a combat role side by side with Afghan National Army troops to an advisory role.
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