Lets get one thing very clear .. that has been missed by all the "headline" makers ....
ALL modern aircraft are DESIGNED to be able to suffer a failure of the "critical engine" at the "critical time" on takeoff and then continue flight. It is designed in and practiced by the crews many many times in simulators.
An aircrafts "critical engine" is "usually" the starboard outboard engine, due to its position and direction of rotation ( the spinning masses of compressors and turbines have a gyroscopic effect), although this is being designed out as far as possible.
The "critical time" is a speed known as V1 .. below that speed the takeoff can be abandoned and the aircraft bought to rest in the remaining length of runway. Above that speed here is insufficient stopping distance.....
So an engine failure AT V1 means the remaing engine(s) must be capable of getting the aircraft airborne, under control, and to a sufficient altitude that either a return to land in good weather, or a diversion to the "take off diversion" in bad weather is accomplished.
Whilst it was alarming for the pasengers, and probably a little exciting on the flight deck, the aircraft and crew did no more than what the designers and the hours of training had equiped them to do.
The ideas of "miracle survival" (!!), "close call", "near accident" are all scaremongering and newspaper selling of the worst kind.
It was a "routine mishap" if you like american jargon ....
