Its not happened yet, since the need hasnt arisen.
How can that be when India, and til recently the US, were accusing Pakistan of being hand in glove with the Afghan Taliban and India was accusing Pakistan of being complicit in attacks on Indian interests in Afghanistan?
On the flip side it has a huge negative value for Pakistan. As I said earlier, to have influence in a country, you dont need to dominate it miltarily.
India's presence alone does not have a negative value for Pakistan, it is India's perceived role in destabilizing Pakistan from Afghan soil that has a negative value. From Pakistan's perspective, an Afghanistan that respects Pakistani sovereignty and territorial integrity in accordance with internationally recognized borders is all we need.
The whole concept of additional billions comes into play only if Pakistan keeps an impossible condition like kicking India out for its logistical support. That hasnt happened yet.. Also the 1st reaction to that kind of situation will be a call similar to what Bush Administration made to Musharraf in 2001. If that does not work, then we get to this scenario. Persoanlly I dont think it will go that far..
You misunderstand 'kicking out' - 'kicking out' does not involve a complete absence of India, though commentators often like to suggest that what Pakistan wants is for a complete absence of any Indian presence whatsoever (give the PA a little more credit than entertaining implausible conditions such as those).
'Kicking out' is primarily over issues such as an expanded Indian military role in training the ANA and other Afghan security forces - which at the moment appears to be something the West is comfortable with entertaining.
Defining 'kicking out' the way you have done is IMO an attempt to set the bar for supposed Pakistani expectations unreasonably high, so that the inevitable failure to fulfill those supposed conditions appears as a strategic victory for India.
Pakistan's goal in Afghanistan going back to the rise of the Taliban and our support for it was to stabilize Afghanistan and have a GoA that respected Pakistani territorial integrity. Pakistan has paid a tremendous price in terms of refugees, drugs, weapons and crime because of the chaos and instability in Afghanistan. Western and Indian investment in Afghanistan serves to alleviate many of the conditions that cause Afghanistan to be such a headache for Pakistan.
But again, what Pakistan does not want is an Indian influenced Afghanistan that allows covert Indian activities in Pakistan from its soil, and perhaps joins in with India to conduct its own covert activities in a throw back to the days of Daud and the irredentist claims over FATA and the NWFP.
What Pakistan is likely asking the West for is assurances on that count, and those assurances (and limitations such as an increased Indian role in training the ANA and intelligence) do not come conditioned to a zero Indian presence in Afghanistan nor a halt to continued Indian investment in Afghanistan.