Colonel Cathcart
Colonel Cathcart is a
fictional character in the
1961 novel
Catch-22, written by
Joseph Heller. He was portrayed by
Martin Balsam in
Mike Nichols'
1970 film adpatation of the novel.
He is a group
commander at a U.S.
Army Air Corps base in
Pianosa,
Italy during
World War II and is obsessed with becoming a
general. As such, he does whatever it takes to please his superiors, particularly, by raising the number of missions the men have to fly to complete a tour of duty, beyond that normally ordered by other outfits. This becomes the bane of
Yossarian's life.
Ironically, Cathcart himself has only flown in two missions, one of which was accidental.
Cathcart nightly makes lists of "feathers in his cap" and "black eyes", often finding something in the former category is in fact in the latter once considering all the possible ways in which his superiors could react to them. In his attempts to please nearly everyone, Cathcart discovers that all the other soldiers hate him. This perception lives largely in his mind, but it affects his relationships with the others and they soon begin to actually dislike and/or avoid him. His
paranoia, matched only by his arrogance, worsens throughout the course of the novel. The concept of catch-22 is also represented in the character of Colonel Cathcart, as he consists entirely of irreconcilable oppositions and maintains an illogical thought process that echoes that of the catch.
Cathcart hates Yossarian almost as much as Yossarian hates him. When Yossarian publicly refuses to fly any more missions, Cathcart champs at the bit to have him
court martialed, but his right hand man,
Colonel Korn, talks him out of it, advising him that a dismissal from the
Air Force is exactly what he wants; Cathcart instead decorates him to ensure that he will stay in the service.
Cathcart is a master of political
doublespeak, often completely contradicting what he says seconds after he says it, usually when a superior officer disagrees with him.
When Yossarian is caught
AWOL in
Rome, Cathcart is eager to have him court martialed and imprisoned, but Korn once again convinces him to offer him the credit for enough missions to send him home instead, to hush the whole affair up. Yossarian briefly considers the offer, but changes his mind when he hears that another soldier got out of duty by escaping to Sweden.