Unless accepted by the AHJ as a modification. In doing restoration work for major universities with old "college Gothic" buildings (some genuinely historic, some just very old), I've been involved as a code consultant and gotten existing 9-panel, stile-and-rail oak doors approved as equivalent to 45-minutes for rated corridors by backing up the raised panels with a layer of 5/8" Type X GWB on the room side, thereby preserving the historic appearance of the doors on the corridor side.
Using Harmathy's principles from Resource A of the IEBC, what we find as one of the rules distills down to "If something resists fire, more of it resists fire better." It would be a gutsy call on the part of the AHJ, since adding a second layer of wired glass would void the label on the door, but it clearly wouldn't make the door any worse. The big problem with wired glass (or any glass) in a rated door is temperature rise in the glass, and having two layers with an air gap should improve that, not make it worse.