I don't think that the proposed edit is a good way to deal with dead links. In this special case, the strike-through tags introduced invalid HTML, as mentioned by @MikeMcCaughan. In general, strike-through text introduces a revision history within the post. This shouldn't be, because we have the revision history for that. A post should always contain the latest version only.
And I think that the ALL-CAPS-IN-BOLD text is not really an option already became clear from the comments, too. Nobody gets harmed when somebody clicks on a (truly) dead link.
Regarding the dead links: If I discover a dead link, then I usually try to replace it by a valid one. If I can't find a replacement link using Google, then I usually ask the OP whether they can update the link in their post.
However, replacing dead links by Wayback Machine links also seems legit to me. IMHO, marking a link as dead doesn't add any value.
Of course, things are different for links that are not dead, but lead to malware instead. If such links cannot be updated, then I think they should be removed and the edit summary should reflect that the original link now leads to malware.
<strike>...</a></strike>
). Not to mention the all-caps-in-bold monstrosity of text. Just a parentheses around a short note, (link dead, see archive.org) would be more than sufficient.