My 2c - The people best placed to know the details of his coaching badges are Ramon and any potential employers he has applied to. If he was likely to finish it in May as first reported (now people are saying August) you'd have thought he have at least got a look in at the AWs gig (there wasn't a huge rush on that appointment given the time of the WC cycle) - yet he didn't. Similar seems to have happened with previous tilts at AL jobs as well.
Seems to me like there is something to all this that isn't as simple as "he has his A and will have his Pro very soon". I don't think it's a huge leap to put some credibility in these claims either his acadef qual isn't up to snuff (2 month course seems a bit off) or he has failed his attempts at the pro a few times and that's got employers jumpy.
Or if you actually look at the acadef website you see the level 3 course which allows you to coach at an national and international level requires 600 hours theoretical, 200 hours practical training and 75 hours for the final project (bit more than 2 months) and he's working towards it (you obviously don't get it over night)
If there was an issue with his licence he wouldn't have got through the door for his previous interviews with A-League teams
There are 2 issues one is that he is currently in an amateur league and alot of people can't get past that and also I think he has been wanting to be the head coach, whereas he could have got into an A-League club if he'd been willing to take an assistant's role and work his way up (which is what he did at ACFC)
It's looking at the website that gives me more pause than I would have had otherwise. They talk about how "it is NOT necessary to ask for any of the UEFA licenses that the RFEF gives" for their "UEFA equivalent" badges which implies to me these courses are not recognised by the national body and are not actual UEFA badges? I may be wrong but that seems the implication to me - also there is translation at play muddying the water even more. Even having a section of the website to explain the "validity" of your qual feels strange.
Published legal decisions regarding this make it a lengthy/confusing read so I'm not going to pretend to know the situation especially given I'm sure there are a lot of Spanish politics at play that I'm not aware of but if they aren't recognised by the national body as a UEFA badge it would seem hard to recognise them in an entirely different confed. They can say it's not necessary but that doesn't ring true given this is a standardised thing.
I'm not saying any of this is fact but a little bit of digging seems to give more rather than less cred to this random claim someone threw out there. And to your question of not getting in the door isn't that precisely what happened for the AWs job? Similarly foreign assistant AL coaches require a pro licence too.
We can speculate all we like but as I said Ramon and employers are the ones most in the know on this and they are the ones not shortlisting him due to not having the required badges.
Personally I'd love Ramon to be in the mix but this feels like a good explanation of why he hasn't been given a shot yet and doesn't seem to be getting a look in for one either. It's the first reason I've seen that makes any sense to me.