Yes, agreed. APT may not have been a suitable control for a variety of reasons. But if we are ever making a reference to the number of sessions of SMC being less than CBT and GET, then I think it might be worth remembering that APT was also proposed as a control.
APT was supposed to be testing 'pacing' as 'championed' by the patients, so it was not really envisioned as a control (apologies if someone mentioned this already; I am kind of behind).
However there are all kinds of problems with APT as traditional pacing. It supposedly used a model of 'undiscovered illness' causing symptoms (therefore pacing to ameliorate possible effects of said mystery illness, opaque to research), but patients were told that symptoms were caused by, for example, 'overbreathing' (disproved by research; CBT intrusion as hyperventilation would go along with anxiety/fear), poor sleep hygiene (CBT intrusion; this is an issue traditionally explored by CBT-type interventions and not solely caused by physiological disease) and, iirc, possibly by reconditioning (GET intrusion). Furthermore most patients' pacing doesn't involve extensive planning; this tends to wear us out. While we do have an idea of stopping activity before we wear ourselves out, the notion of 70% threshold in particular is novel AFAIK.
I think the notion of 'create the best conditions for natural recovery' is a bit weak of a plan compared to the promises of CBT and GET (basically, we have done this before and this can truly cure you, wasn't it?).
Also there is a lot of confusion in the APT module, between the official APT model and the intrusion of the preferred models of the manual authors. I think this confusion could have reduced efficacy. Plus the idea of an illness which nobody has any idea of any substantial physical pathology for, despite conducting research, is not exactly encouraging. It's too bad some researchers (and government agencies) do not seem to know how to read anything more complicated than the Daily Mail.