There are a lot of misconceptions here, surprising from airline mechanics. ( Cobra, you work for the majors? I find that hard to believe)
But as far as the 747 that lost power in one of its engines shortly after taking off from Los Angeles International Airport. The pilot made an emergency landing in Manchester, England, about 160 miles short of London, because the Boeing 747 ran low on fuel after facing headwinds that were stronger than expected, the Federal Aviation Administration said., that is a big NONO and easy to see who is at fault.
Toad hit on the points of how this could shake down when the investigation works out, but just so you know, union lawyers aside, the Captain is pilot in command, and can call and should have put that plane down in L.A., immediately. No if’s, ands, or OPS Agents that would say otherwise. Well, they could say “Keep flying”, but a Capt. of a 747 in his role with all that experience certainly would have declared an emergency and told the operations guy to go *** himself, OPS Specs or not. Bottom line. No competent Captain of an airliner that loses an engine on take off EVER, and I mean EVER should not just return to LAX and get it fixed. Fire that retard on landing 160 miles short of his destination.
All the other posts about turbine engines failing often, and not just BITE checking the wires seems way off. What do I know, just saying.