drive. they caught a fully functioning car in half as we engineered it. the result is a mind bending affect that makes the car look like it is swimming through the pavement. the car might look like it is moving around on the zone like a roomba, but controlled with a video game controller. well, that makes it reassuring. and that it is safe. what if a mouse is crossing the road? maybe you ll scoop it up. it doesn t look like it s going too fast. no, but it s low. that s how low can you go. that s it at 5:00. see you back here at 6:00 for tonight, high-stakes diplomacy in europe and china. president biden heads to a critical nato summit. the goal, manage new divisions over ukraine, explain new u.s. military support and chart the alliance s future.
from britain to germany and italy were starting to get nervous about the alliance s future. and then vladimir putin s decision to go into ukraine showed that nato did indeed have a very real purpose. so far, the alliance has kept pretty much together, but can that continue? our diplomatic correspondent james landale. both sides are trying to assess where they go next, how long they can last, how much ammunition they ve got. you know, both sides are getting through a substantial amount of military kit and materiel, and, you know, this stuff is finite. but it means that, at the moment, both sides are just sort of settling down. the great russian offensive in the east has stalled, to a certain extent little bits gained here, little bits lost there, but no substantial move. i was in ankara when president putin talked
one of the big surprises about the ukraine war has been the response of nato. before the russian invasion, american leadership seemed abysmally weak. rememberjoe biden s decision to pull out of afghanistan? france openly questioned whether nato still had any function to perform, and member countries from britain to germany and italy were starting to get nervous about the alliance s future. and then vladimir putin s decision to go into ukraine showed that nato did indeed have a very real purpose. so far, the alliance has kept pretty much together, but can that continue? our diplomatic correspondent james landale. both sides are trying to assess where they go next, how long they can last, how much ammunition they ve got.