The Navy does not give commissions. They are earned. Limited Duty Officer designator 6422 — Information Systems — is the designation given to enlisted members who have demonstrated technical mastery and operational leadership at a level that justifies officer authority. Carlton A. James earned it. That distinction matters because it means he did not enter the command-and-control world through an academy. He came from the deck plates.
Before the commission, he was in Iraq. Marines, G6 division, Al Asad Air Base. Communications infrastructure in a combat environment. Every network decision had life-or-death consequences. Every system failure was not an inconvenience — it was a gap in the intelligence picture that commanders depended on. He learned what the word accountability actually means when the stakes are kinetic.
Fort Bragg came next. Army Special Operations Communicators. The signals intelligence community that enables the most precise military operations on earth. He was not special operations. He was the infrastructure they depended on. The invisible architecture. The system that has to work when nothing else can fail.
USS Mount Whitney. The 6th Fleet command ship. The most sophisticated command-and-control vessel the United States Navy operates. Not a warship in the conventional sense — a floating intelligence and operations center from which theater-level commanders direct naval operations across the Mediterranean, Black Sea, and Baltic. The ship is the platform. Carlton was its intelligence officer.
He saw what it meant to orchestrate thousands of moving pieces — ships, aircraft, agencies, intelligence streams — through a single command architecture with perfect information, real-time situational awareness, and autonomous systems executing within defined authority boundaries. He saw what happened when the architecture worked. He also saw what happened when a single point of failure broke it.
He separated. The institution he served for twenty years gave him a retirement ceremony. What it did not give him was a business operating system capable of running a veteran-owned company at the level he had learned to operate. QuickBooks does not run like a fleet. HubSpot does not think like an intelligence officer. No tool on the market was built by someone who understood what command-and-control actually feels like at scale.
So he built one. Not a product. An architecture. AISCO — AI-Informed Strategic Command Operations — the four-layer framework that governs every agent, every zone, every decision on X.R.A.Y. Intelligence first. Command always. Operations executed. Strategy compounding. The exact doctrine he operated under at sea, translated into software that serves the veterans who come after him.
Earned a commission from the deck plates. Designator 6422 — one of the most demanding technical Officer paths in the Navy. Served in multiple theaters, multiple commands, multiple warfare communities.
Communications infrastructure in a combat environment. Network failures are not downtime tickets — they are gaps in the intelligence picture that cost lives. Learned accountability at the highest stakes available.
The signals infrastructure that enables the most precise military operations on earth. The invisible architecture. The system that has to work when nothing else can fail.
Intelligence Officer aboard the most sophisticated command-and-control vessel the U.S. Navy operates. Theater-level operations across the Mediterranean, Black Sea, and Baltic. The flagship of the 6th Fleet.
Applied enterprise architecture doctrine to DoD systems. TOGAF certification. The discipline of designing systems for the ceiling, not the moment — the principle that governs every build decision at 25 Alpha.
Left the institution. Kept the doctrine. Built X.R.A.Y. — the AI business operating system for veteran entrepreneurs that the Navy, the Marines, the Army, and the DoD proved was possible. Now it serves the warriors who follow.
Teaching the next generation of technologists — in a public high school classroom — while building a platform for 18.6 million veterans. The mission was never just one thing.
X.R.A.Y. launches publicly on Juneteenth 2026. The date was not chosen for marketing reasons. It was chosen because freedom and economic power are inseparable — and the 25 Alpha mission is to make sure every veteran entrepreneur who served this country has access to the intelligence infrastructure that lets them compete at the level their service earned.
154 autonomous agents. 18 enterprise zones. NAICS-aware intelligence. The same level of situational awareness and operational command that he operated at sea — now in the hands of the veteran business owner who deserves it most.