It is impossible to solve this problem with Yacc.
Yacc is a LALR(1) parser generator. LALR refers to a class of grammars. A grammar is a math tool to reason about parsing. One in parens refers to the lookahead - that is a max number of tokens we consider before definitely deciding which of the alternative productions (or "rules") to follow. Remember, the parsing algorithm is one pass, it can't backtrack and try another alternative as some regular expression engines do.
Concerning your palindrom problem, when a parser encounters 'a', it has to pick the right choice somehow
pal: A - 'a' alone is a valid palindrome all by itself, let's call it the inner core
pal: [A] pal A - outter layer, increasing nesting level
pal: A pal [A] - outter layer, decreasing nesting level
Making the right choice is impossible without infinite lookahead, but Yacc has only one token of lookahead.
The way Yacc handles this grammar is interesting as well.
If a grammar is ambiguous or not LR(1) the generated stack automata is non-deterministic. There are some builtin tools to fix it.
The first tool is priorities and associativity to deal with operators in programming languages (not relevant here).
Another one is a quirk - by default Yacc prefers "shift" to "reduce". These two are technicalities reffering to the internal operation of the parse algorithm. Basically tokens are "shift" into a stack. Once a group of tokens on the top match a rule it is possible to "reduce" them, replacing entire group with the single non-terminal from the left side of the rule.
Hence once we have 'a' at the top, we can either reduce it to a pal, or we can shift another token in assuming that a nested pal will emerge eventually. Yacc prefers the later.
The reason for this preference? The same ambiguity arrise in if-then-else statement in most languages. Consider two nested if statements but only one else clause. Yacc attaches else to the innermost if statement which seams to be the right thing to do.
Besides Yacc can generate a report highlighting issues in the grammar like shift-reduce conflicts mentioned above.