Zev Sufott joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1950, beginning a diplomatic career that lasted more than forty years. He was posted to the
Embassy of Israel in Washington, D.C., where he served as First Secretary and Counselor, and
London as
Consul General. He then served as the Israel Ambassador to the
Netherlands, and afterwards as Deputy Director for Europe at the Foreign Ministry. In 1990, Sufott was approached by the then Director General of the Foreign Ministry, Reuven Merhav, who informed him that Israel intended to open a
liaison office of the
Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities in
Beijing, the capital of China. It was the first step to the establishment of
diplomatic relations between Israel and the
People's Republic of China. Merhav appointed Sufott as Special Advisor at the liaison office in 1991. In 1992, the two countries established full diplomatic relations and Sufott was appointed as Israel's first Ambassador to China. In 1997, Sufott published a book,
A China Diary: Towards the Establishment of China-Israel Diplomatic Relations, detailing the history of
China–Israel relations. He further reflected on fledgling relations between the nations in a 2000 article for
Israel Affairs, writing, "In the four decades before diplomatic relations, and even after their establishment in 1992, China has never been a priority on Israel's
foreign policy agenda… On the contrary, Israel's foreign policy vis-à-vis China has been influenced, and at times dictated, by policy priorities and interests in other regions." ==Death==