I would guess that there are a few issues going one here, starting with the sander itself. The ETS125 is a finish sander, with a tiny 2mm stroke. This alone makes it unsuitable for anything "aggressive", in the first place, even less-so for finishes than have a tendency to clog. Shellac, nitrocellulose lacquer (not catalyzed) and paint all fit into this.
Since you are already stripping, I would go as far with that as you can. It will save time and material in the long run. Then go to the sanding, but with a longer stroke sander. Dust extraction is your friend here. You have to get that swarf out of the way. Re-sanding that dust is what clogs paper. This is the "corning" that [member=10952]leakyroof[/member] mentioned. This is the little balls that cling to the paper. It is essentially melted finish and wood dust combined into a plastic like glue. In most circumstances, the first recommendation to cure corning is "let the finish dry longer", which doesn't apply here. The second is "go one grit more coarse". This can be sketchy with veneers. Older ones are usually thicker, but it's not worth the risk.
After all that..
Strip more, maybe change strippers too?
Scrape what you can
Sand with a more aggressive sander. 5mm stroke would be best, but even 3mm is 50% more than what you have.
Start with 120, if you still get corning or clogging, go to 100. The jump to 80 may be too much to recover from later.
Keep the sander moving and the surface clean. Concentrating in one place digs holes and garbage under the sandpaper clogs the paper, builds heat, creates swirl marks.
Hope that helps