Looking at your drawing, I am assuming that you have your slab 6' below finished grade (yes, I read your post, 6' of backfill).
If I am correct, I do not see that your wall is over "engineered". Most people will look at this like a basement, it is not. In a basement you have the first floor platform act as a structural member. In that case your wall is aided by your slab and platform. If you notice in a normal basement drawing, the rebar would have been placed in the inner 1/3 of the wall because all the pressure on the wall would place the inner wall in tension. On your wall, you do not have that top platform. So the pressure from the soil is putting the inner wall in compression and the outer wall in tension (vertically). Your engineer placed the rebar in the outer 1/3 of the wall, he has designed you foundation wall to be a retaining wall.
I am personally a belt and suspenders type, so I would have (and did on my own house) place a double mat of rebar (one 2" from the outer wall and one 2" from the inner wall).
I assume your engineer evaluated the soil type, if so, I would not second guess him. A few 1000 #s of rebar and concrete is cheap compared to a wall failing.