Ideally, situations like that would be resolved before there are any answers. That's the easiest case. Any user can edit (or suggest an edit) on a question and then comment to the OP asking them to post whatever got edited out separately.
Assuming there already are answers that address both questions...
Edit to remove one or the other, which might invalidate some answers?
If there aren't many answers, this is not a bad idea. You can edit the question and leave comments on the answers saying the question has changed and part of its scope was removed. Most answer authors in my experience will either edit or remove their answers in response, as needed.
If there are a lot of answers, or the questions is old, you may be limited to just commenting on the question asking the OP to not post like that again.
Flag for mod to separate into different questions?
- Is this even doable?
- How do you handle answers that attempt to answer both?
Moderators can't do anything in this case that any regular user couldn't do. At most, a moderator can edit the question and post the removed part as a new question of their own. Answers could be handled as described above.
This is not the best practice, however, since in some sense doing that steals reputation and the question from the OP. If it's something that requires OP's further input, having someone else post the question would only complicate things.
Moderators cannot split answers or move answers between questions, short of editing and reposting as their own.
Vote to close, even if separately one or both questions meet the acceptable criteria?
I don't think voting to close is appropriate in this case. At best, you could use "Not a real question" as a reason, but if the question doesn't yet have answers, it's best to just edit it. If it does have answers, then it most likely was answerable.
Other?
I think handling this situation through edits and comments is the best approach. Sometimes we might have to live with combined questions, but that's life. Hopefully there aren't so many out there that this is a widespread problem.