From my experience it's an old practice intended to help protect motors from grid transients but has been abandoned for the most part now. The only time I have seen it done on small motors like this is when they are on machines going to parts of the world with unstable / unreliable power. They can however cause serious problems if left in place when VFDs and Soft Starters are connected to the motors, which is much much more common now than it was 20 years ago. But because most people don't know what they are, they tend to leave them in and discover the pitfalls when the power devices in the solid state controllers fail on short order.
I still see a lot of older specs for large MV machines that call for them, even when being controlled by SS controllers, because a lot of the specs are older and nobody has bothered to update them. GE used to include them if you asked for them or not on their MV motors and sometimes still do, which causes extra work in the field to remove them.
"Will work for (the memory of) salami"