Probably you cannot bend a jacketed FO cable to a tight
enough radius that the internal reflection is badly-enough
compromised for the link to fail.
The signal is passed digitally and over the short haul you
probably have a huge signal-strength surplus. You might
still recover digital data after losing 90% of the optical
power. You would have to cleave, not bend, the fiber to
lose that much.
These days optical links have become highly integrated
little modules. You might not recognize the piece, and
the guts may resemble a 3D stack of chips (mod/demod,
VCSEL/PIN diode, optical interface) but you'd have a
hard time disassembling the "nugget" to see.
Or, "optical fire" could be marketing BS referring to the
day-glo jacket of a plain old copper wire. Who knows?