Over the last decade, Indo-Pacific has become a buzzword describing the redefined vision for the Asia-Pacific region stretching from the Pacific Ocean into Eastern Africa. Promoted by Japan, the USA and several other allies, the new regional demarcation was understood to provide a better foundation for fostering regional security and economic cooperation. But does the new discursive framing represent any significant on-the-ground change in regional integration? We argue that although the Indo-Pacific narrative has a geopolitical substance in addressing the rise of China, it has yet to develop as a comprehensive regional framing beyond the geopolitical alliance. Institutionally, economically and culturally, there are few connections between ...