Do you mean section 5.5.x? I would say no, that bond beams do not have the required stiffness to act as a lateral support, whether or not they have the strength. You can try designing some kickers that go to your roof diaphragm and support the masonry laterally. I've done that before and it usually works out fine. Make sure to check your attachments of your kickers, whether with an embed or something else, plus additional forces into your roof members from the brace. I like to use an angle that's attached with epoxy anchors or expansion bolts.
I notice that this is an empirical requirement, if I am correct that you are using chapter 5 instead of 9. If you engineer the masonry according to chapter 2 this requirement is eliminated but you have more equations and stuff to check, such as calculating all the strengths instead of using tables. This could make what you have work if all the engineering works out but I would suggest you at least consult someone familiar with engineered masonry. Though I always engineer masonry, I still encounter h/t limits when doing designs in south Florida where they have special requirements.