Afghanistan veteran devastated over country's fate

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Veterans of war in Afghanistan left wondering what's next

Evan Axelbank reports

The moment the World Trade Center buildings came down, Bryan Stern found his calling.

"I remember looking behind me and not understanding what I was seeing," he said. "I remember wanting my pound of flesh. I am a New Yorker."

After responding to Ground Zero as a member of the Army, he deployed to Afghanistan with the Navy.

"I have been all over the world and I have never met a culture that was anything like an Afghan. They are salty and gritty."

After more trips on counter-insurgency missions than he can count, images of a country in chaos -- that he tried to bring order to -- are devastating.

RELATED: Veterans seek crisis counseling as violence unfolds in Afghanistan

"There is a very good likelihood that some of the people in that imagery, I have a relationship with, one way or the other."

Even though Afghanistan has 38 million people, about the same as California, he says everyone knows everyone, which is why he's especially worried for those who lent helping hands to Americans, and what their new rulers, the Taliban, will do. 

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First female Afghan pilot scared for young girls in home country

Niloofar Rahmani escaped Afghanistan in 2015 after skyrocketing to fame as the country's first female Air Force pilot since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. Now, she gets emotional thinking about the young girls left behind who’ve never known life under Taliban rule.

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"[They will] murder them, kill them, rape them, torture them," he said. "The Taliban always said they can't wait for us to leave, it's their country."

The war in Afghanistan did see the death of Osama bin Laden and the annihilation of his terrorist network. But it also saw the deaths of 175,000 Afghans and over 2,400 Americans.

It is ending with the thud of reality that a resurgent Taliban could not be stopped with the country's dissipating army.

RELATED: Taliban plan to declare Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan from the presidential palace

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Bay Area vets reflect on Afghanistan

The violence unfolding in Afghanistan is hitting close to home for veterans here in the Bay Area. FOX 13's Jordan Bowen has the story.

"It is called the empire graveyard for a reason."

RELATED: From 7,000 miles away, Bay Area veteran 'shocked' by Afghanistan collapse

And now the experience he had at Ground Zero is bookended by what's happening in Afghanistan and the images of people falling from the wheel wells of planes.

"Weeks away from the 20th anniversary of 9/11, yet again, people are jumping to their deaths out of fear from these people, that's the parallel that I draw."

History repeats itself in Afghanistan.