IF this was sabotage, the saboteur(s) didn’t count on the plane being controlled by a Navy fighter pilot.
One can ask: Why did this fail on this CFM-56 engine, note they will trace the part back to it's origins as it has a paper trail to determine if it is manufacturing defect or stress over time . Was their a stress-or event, is it a maintenance issue, etc etc.
Any other machinations or theories are folly given the role of the NTSB, FAA and the manufacturer of said engine and or sub-contractor of said part(s). They want to get to the bottom of this, this engine and airframe combo are a big part of the fleet and flights daily, they need answers asap, grounding this fleet is not directive that would be taken without great investigative and engineering thought.
I'll leave this one to the Aviation Pro's not the theorist....
BTW the missing blade looks like it was in the 8:30 position in that photo, just below the NTSB logo on the shoulder of the Examiner on the left.
1. Don’t see the broken fin (I do see some bent fins)
2. That is the FRONT of the engine? How does that blow up at 600+ miles per hour from something inside?