OK
So let's see if we can agree what we are discussing.....
If we confine the discussion to failure modes of column which progresses as you say we have basically two:
increase loads
decrease capacity
Loads were not increased
How can capacity decrease?
Heating lowers capacity
mechanical damage such as horizontal impact deforming column
removal of bracing increasing unbraced length lowering capacity. NB when a steel column exceeds a SR ratio of 150 it has left the stable region and become too slender. This applies to the each axis and the column will buckle from Euler forces with either axis exceeds 150.
Columns which lose a single brace may not have the SR changed if the remaining braces provide the restraint effectively maintaining the SR ratio. This is the case for example for perimeter columns and corner columns.
If one looks at the corner of the core of the twin towers... Col 501 for example was the most massive and presumable carried the most axial loads. It was framed such that it had a beam to its long axis web (short 22" side) The other axis had no bracing to column 502 but it did have a beam stub framed to a girder in the short axis which I suppose would be the brace. See the attached diagram. None of the column ends in the etc were restrained. All braces were some where between the ends at something like 3', 15' and 27' from the bottom of the column.
It seems to me.. that loss of a brace does not immediately lead to buckling, though it may lead to loss of capacity. I don't know. NB in the collapse of the twins columns 501 and 601 stood after the core strip down connected by the brace between them only. As a double column they were stable in the long axis but the SR ratio in the short axis far exceeded 150 and they toppled in the direction.
Euler Buckling in multi part (stacked columns) results in failure at the connection... the weakest point. The column to column connection does not require restraint to transfer axial loads. However Euler forces and buckling induce lateral forces in x and y axis and the splice connections are much weaker than the solid section and hence the unbraced multi part column buckles from Euler forces by having it's connections break apart. no web or flange crippling, for example. And this is what we see in the spire columns which failed from Euler buckling.
But
Did would happen Euler bucking if there was some sort of strip down of 5 floors on one side of a column especially with the dimensions of the 7wtc column 79 for example. I think not. I could be wrong.
A column may have twisted rather than buckled, broke it's connection to the one above and the whole line came down. Maybe.
I don't think col 79 experienced Euler buckling. Do you? It seems it would have to lose its bracing over something in the order of 20 stories (a guess as I don't know the size of column 79 at floor 13)... I did the calcs for Euler buckling see attached