Noting furthermore the declaration by the State of Israel that it "unreservedly accepts the obligations of the United Nations Charter and undertakes to honour them from the day when it becomes a member of the United Nations,"
Recalling its resolutions of
29 November 1947 and
11 December 1948 and taking note of the declarations and explanations made by the representative of the Government of Israel before the Ad Hoc Political Committee in respect of the implementation of the said resolutions,
United Nations Security Council Resolution 273 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the 6 months after that declaration they made some 600,000 of their own citizens (Arabs) refugees, a war crime, great start, back to square one.
From your quote:
A transitional period under United Nations auspices was to begin with the adoption of the resolution, and lasting until the establishment of the two states. However, war broke out and the partition plan was never implemented by the Security Council. On March 5, 1948, the United Nations Security Council reached an impasse when it refused to pass a resolution which would have accepted the partition plan as a basis for Security Council action. The United States subsequently recommended a temporary UN trusteeship for Palestine "without prejudice to the character of the eventual political settlement", and the Security Council voted to send the matter back to the General Assembly for further deliberation. The General Assembly decided to appoint a Mediator, and relieved the Palestine Commission from any further exercise of responsibility under resolution 181 (II) of 29 November 1947.
The proposed plan was accepted by the leaders of the Jewish community in Palestine, through the
Jewish Agency.
[2][3] However, the plan was rejected by leaders of the Arab community (the
Palestine Arab Higher Committee etc.),
[2][4] who were supported in their rejection by the states of the
Arab League. In a communication to the United Nations Palestine Commission dated 19 January 1948, the Arab Higher Committee for Palestine stated that it was "determined [to] persist in rejection [to the] partition and in refusal [to] recognize UNO resolution [with] this respect and anything deriving therefrom".
[5] Two minor exceptions to this rejectionist line were the
National Liberation League in Palestine, an Arab-Palestinian Communist faction which supported the Partition Plan (since it followed all
Soviet policies), and Emir Abdullah of Transjordan, who in strictly private discussions was in favor of the partition plan — under the assumption that the Arab state under the plan would be annexed to Transjordan — yet never publicly accepted the plan (he later suggested that Transjordan should annex the whole mandate territory and establish a Jewish autonomous entity, to be eventually aligned with the rest of the Arab countries).
[6]
Nobody accepted anything.