You're asking a lot of questions here...
What to do with open/close wars?
Let 'em burn out. You only get one close or reopen vote per question, so eventually the people who care about a question will have all voted and its status will be resolved as either open or closed.
Shouldn't it be closed but maybe not deleted?
Maaaaybe. If a question is clearly inappropriate but has, for instance, a brilliant, timeless answer... Then keeping it around in some form is polite: breaking The Internet by deleting those rare gems that shouldn't have ended up here but somehow did anyway isn't cool.
That said, this is a poor way to maintain an important question; any closed question is eligible for deletion; keeping it on death row because you don't have the guts to say "guilty" or "innocent" is just asking for trouble. Note that there are currently no limits on how many times one person can vote to delete a question, or how long a vote can remain in the system... So the balance is weighted heavily in favor of closed questions being eventually deleted. Thus, if you don't think a question should be deleted, then you do not want to leave it closed.
Isn't that how historical off-topic questions are 'maintained'?
A "historical significance" lock exists for this purpose; feel free to kick off a meta discussion for any question you think deserves this. Questions locked in this way cannot be deleted or flagged or modified in any way; it is explicitly intended to preserve the state of a question as if it were frozen in time.
OTOH, if a question actually works as a question - that is, it's about programming and provides information of value to working programmers and might even benefit from additional answers as time goes on - then no, closing it makes no sense. Leave it open (perhaps Protect it) and don't worry about it. There are exceptions to every rule; use your judgement.
Also how do we proceed from here to avoid a continued 'open/close' battle?
Stop worrying about it and start trusting your peers a little bit. Democracy is messy, but on the whole it does usually work. The day we become so afraid of our peers that we stop listening to them is the day this whole enterprise goes down the tubes.
If you're concerned that folks are getting frustrated by the battle, then start a discussion here on meta regarding the merits of the question (or lack thereof). Often, giving folks a place to lay out their arguments in depth can do more to resolve a dispute than any other measure. Yes, it will be messy as well... Don't be afraid of a little dirt.
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