Yes, absolutely. It doesn't answer the question in a useful way; it is commentary on the problem. That should be clear to anyone who can read English.
On the other hand, since it incidentally contains the solution to the problem, reviewers likely thought it would be worse to delete it than to leave it. They don't necessarily see the entire context that you saw when flagging: that there is a much earlier, clearer, accepted, and upvoted answer that contains the same information and more.
Armed with that fact, it's easy to recommend deletion, and users with more than 20k (such as myself) can vote to delete negatively-scored answers outside of the queue.
I would recommend downvoting any answer that you're flagging as NAA as a matter of course -- a non-answer is certainly a poor one, and it may encourage reviewers to look more closely. (You'll get the rep you expend back when the answer is deleted.)
NAA flag handling reveals a split of opinions in the users here that has come up quite frequently. There's no clear path to tread.
[solution for the op]
is the solution, he just drops it without commenting it in that context.