As a side note since I don't think I've wrote it, I do believe that the indians transgressed into the contested LAC zones way more often than the PLA, as said by the random retired indian general that
@twineedle so proudly brought up. I mean it's clear as day given the gap of how much resources and attention (quantity-wise) each side has given into it before the start of the skirmish. China's main priority is always gonna be in the east, against renegade taiwan and the south china sea, both are an extension of the current China-america rivalry. It is laughable to think that china has ever taken this skirmish as serious as india, yet given the quality gap between each side, it is also very clear from the start that china will still get the upper hand at the end of the day with faster deployments, better weapons, better infrastructures, and better scalability.
This time however, the proven over aggression that india has done to china, coupled with the timing of them clearly trying to take advantage of china during its low of managing (at the time) the epidemic, the indians clearly have touched the bottom line. Our response, be it the 'intrusions', building infrastructures, etc.; ALL of them, are justified as a DEFENSIVE act against the intruding indians. This has been the official narrative from our side since the beginning, which is the closest it can be to the truth of the what, how, and why of the whole fiasco.
In conclusion, people shouldn't be disappointed with the new agreement of buffer zones established on the LAC, since it actually restricts india more than China. Not to mention that while the agreement asked us to dismantle 'all' equipments from f4 to f8, many things are just simply cannot be dismantled. One easy example is the additional roads that are built, which would make China's position and deployment even stronger and faster if further conflicts ensue in the future.