I've seen glass fail on some recurves. They all failed on the back in the area of the fadeouts, or fadeout lams, or wedges in the case of takedowns. They did not blow or delaminate at all because they owners stopped using them before complete failure. Any experienced bowyer could look at these bows and deduce exactly why they failed. But that's not the point. The point is, not a single one failed in these compromised areas on the belly. It was always the glass on the back that fatigued and then failed. This leads me to believe glass is stronger in compression resistance than tension resistance, but I don't know that for a fact.
These bows were brought to me to refinish because in each instance the owners believed the stress marks were only in the finish. I refinished two of them, and they looked almost like new when I was done. Their glass was brown, and the faintest smokey shadow was barely visible afterwards. Even if I pointed it out to you, it was almost impossible to see. But after a few weeks or months of additional use, it came back, and then with continued use, the glass fibers eventually began to raise to the point you could feel them. This happened in an area about 2-3" long and the whole way across their limbs.