Oh hey, I declined that. It's a borderline answer, but I'm pretty strict about these things:
Yes, they're both very short, and yes, they contain links. But strip the markup, and you still get at least a little bit of useful information. Does that mean these answers should forever hang around the site? No, not necessarily - if it turns out they're just not that useful, they should probably still be removed - or at very least, down-voted so that they rank below other answers.
Just remember: if the text of the post contains an honest attempt at answering the question, then it is an answer - so don't flag it otherwise, and if you do, don't complain if your flag gets declined.
I'm drawing a fine line here between an answer that depends on an off-site resource and an answer that literally doesn't exist until you follow a link. I think it's an important line. Especially when...
Similarly, I voted to close the question
You voted to close it as "unclear", which it kinda is. The question was eventually closed as "Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic", which it also is. Such questions usually attract answers like these, because they're kinda asking for them:
Don't get me wrong, it's still a bad answer - but when the question is kinda asking for bad answers this is to be expected. Close or flag the question and move on - this is much more efficient than hanging around to babysit it by deleting every crap answer that inevitably shows up.
Note that originally, all of the other answers to that question were just as bad (or worse!) than the one you flagged; getting rid of the question (and preventing further answers) is the most expedient way to put a stop to such trouble. I say "originally" because ONE answerer responded to a review auto-comment by editing his answer to add detailed information. In light of this, it may actually be worthwhile to edit the question to fit this answer, and then remove the answer you originally flagged.
I didn't expect the mods to delete the answer, I flagged it as the answer deserved being flagged
is a non sequitor. When you flag something, you're asking a moderator to delete it. In cases such as this, a moderator can a) decline the flag, b) delete the content, or c) convert the content to a comment. If you can edit the relevant content at the end of the link into the answer in blockquote format with proper attribution, do so (and don't flag), otherwise, use a custom flag explaining why you found it impossible to edit, and why you think it is causing harm.