You are assuming the compiler is bug free without optimizations and only the optimizations are dangerous. the compilers themselves are programs and very often have bugs with or without using certain features. Sure the features might make it better or they might make it worse.
Llvm was mentioned in another answer, there is a well know llvm optimization bug that they appear to have zero interest in fixing
while(1) continue;
gets optimized out, just goes away...sometimes...and other similar but not completely infinite loops also disappear in the llvm optimizer. Leaving you with a binary that doesnt match your source code. This is one I know there are probably many more in both gcc and llvm's compilers.
gcc is a monster that is barely held together with duct tape and bailing wire. It is like watching one of those faces of death movies or something like that once you have had those images in your head one time, you cant unwatch them, they are burned in there for life. So it is worth finding out for yourself how scary gcc is, by looking behind the curtain. But you might not be able to forget what you had seen. For various targets -O0 -O1 -O2 -O3 can and have all failed miserably with some code at some point in time. Likewise the fix sometime is to optimize more not less.
When you write a program the hope is the compiler does what it says it does, just like you hope your program does what you say it does. But it is not always the case, your debugging does not end when the source code is perfect, it ends when the binary is perfect, and that includes whatever binary and operating system you hope to target (different minor versions of gcc make different binaries, different linux targets react differently to programs).
The most important advise is develop and test using the target optimization level. if you develop and test by always building for a debugger, well you have a created a program that works in a debugger, you get to start over when you want to make it work somewhere else. gcc's -O3 does work often but folks are afraid of it and it doesnt get enough usage to be debugged properly, so it is not as reliable. -O2 and no optimization -O0 get a lot of mileage, lots of bug reports, lots of fixes, choose one of those or as another answer said, go with what Linux uses. Or go with what firefox uses or go with what chrome uses.
Now hard realtime embedded systems. Man mission systems, systems where life or property are directly affected. First why are you using gcc? Second, yes, optimizers are often NOT used in these environments, it creates too much risk and/or greatly increases the testing and validation effort. Normally you want to use a compiler that has been through a lot of testing itself and its warts and traps are well known. Do you want to be the person who turned on the optimizer, and as a result the flight computer crashed the airplane into an elementary school on a school day? There is a lot to be learned from the old timers. yes they have a lot of war stories, and a lot of fear of new fangled things. dont repeat history, learn from it. "They dont build em like they used to" means something it is not just a saying. those legacy systems were stable and reliable and still running for a reason, partly those old timers and what they learned the hard way, and partly because newer stuff is built cheaper and with lower quality components.
For this class of environment you definitely dont stop at the source code, your money and time is poured into validating the BINARY. Each time you change the binary you need to start validation over again. No different than the hardware it runs on, you change one component you, warm up one solder joint, you start validation testing over again from the beginning. One difference perhaps is that in some of these environments each solder joint is only allowed a maximum number of cycles before you scrap the whole unit. But it can be the case in software, only so many burn cycles on the prom before you scrap the prom and only so many rework cycles on the prom pads/holes before you scrap the board/unit. Leave the optimizer off and find a better, more stable, compiler and/or programming language.
Now if this hard real time environment is not going to hurt people or property (other than what it runs on) when it crashes, then that is another story. Maybe its a blue ray player and it skips a frame here and there or displays a few bad pixels, big deal. Turn the optimizer on, the masses dont care about that level of quality anymore, they are content with youtube quality images, compressed video formats, etc. Cars that have to be turned off and on again for the radio or bluetooth to work. Doesnt bother them one bit, turn the optimizer on and claim performance gain over your competitor. If the software is too buggy to tolerate the customers will work around it or just buy someone elses, when that one fails they will come back to you and buy your new model with the newer firmware. They will continue to do this because they want to dancing baloney, they dont want stability nor quality. That stuff costs too much.
You should collect your own data, try the optimizers on the software in your environment and run the product through a full validation suite. If it doesnt break then either the optimizer for that code that day is okay or the test system needs more work. If you cannot do that then you can at least disassemble and analyze what the compiler is doing with your code. I would assume (and know from personal experience) that both gcc and llvm bug systems do have bugs that are tied to optimization levels, does that mean you can sort them based on optimization level? Dont know, these are open source, largely uncontrolled interfaces, so you cant rely on the masses to accurately and completely define the input fields, if there were an optimization field on the bug report form, it is probably always set to the default for the form/web page. You have to examine the problem report itself to see if the user had problems related to the optimizer. If this were a closed system for a corporation where an employees performance review might be negatively reflected for not following procedure like filling out forms correctly, you would have better searchable databases to draw information from.
The optimizer does increase your risk. Lets say 50% of the compiler is used to get an output with no optimization, another 10% to get -O1, you have increased your risk, more compiler code used, more risk of having a bug, more risk in the output being bad. and more code is used to get to -O2 and -O3. Reducing optimization doesnt eliminate the risk completely but does reduce the odds.