The problem is often that the post has been made by a non-native
English speaker, so I will also have spent a while untangling the
language to establish the real question, and rewriting and editing the
OP's original words
That's actually really great - Questions that get edited after being put on hold (the process you call here "suspended") get pushed into the Reopen queue, where 3000+ rep users can determine whether the question now meets the quality standards of the site - and when they conclude that it does it will get reopened.
Yes, I can vote to reopen a question, but unlike the blanket close
privilege that I have on duplicate questions, I still need others to
agree with me that it should be reopened
And that's good, because we all curate this site together, so that judgement call isn't yours alone to make. It's barely anyone's, only moderators and Stack Exchange employees can do that. And from what I hear and from what the theory of moderation says, even the people who can do that are reluctant to do it unless its a fringe case. Generally speaking, the curation of this site is by most fundamental design a team effort - of everyone.
Given Stack Overflow's renowned failure to properly resurrect old
posts, even if the question is changed beyond all recognition, I
suggest that it should be possible to post a solution to any suspended
post. After all, by insurrection I may post anything as an edit to the
question or, god forbid, as a sequence of comments
I never felt that, and I'm not sure this is supported by evidence; can you maybe provide some concrete examples? We can fix all of this retroactively when it turns out to be legitimately wrongly closed.
To be clear: If you could answer any closed question, then the facility of closing a question would be all but irrelevant. The primary purpose of closing a question is to stop it from receiving (mostly poorly thought out or crapshoot) answers while its problems are being fixed.
What is this prohibition aiming to achieve? Can it be abolished?
It's one of our primary quality control mechanisms. Stack Exchange and Stack Overflow in particular get loads of really, really bad questions. Not necessarily questions that nobody can crank out a half-related boilerplate answer to, but questions that should never be answered. Remember the primary purpose of this is to create a repository of knowledge, not to satisfy the instant gratification demands of every last user.
In conclusion: I don't think you should be able to answer closed questions - they're closed for a reason. If you really care that much about a closed question, get it reopened.