Petter has helpfully explained what you actually wanted this for, so I'll address the uses he raised:
Not voting / not flagging. I'm not sure this is a great idea; it actually changes the behavior of review. Obviously, not close-voting means the question won't be closed as quickly, which is problematic if you want to prevent answers (if that's not what you want, you shouldn't be close voting anyway). But there's a more subtle effect for Low Quality review: fewer flags means fewer "looks ok" reviews are required to resolve the task. The root problem here is that we have essentially two parallel review interfaces, the one under /review and the old one in the 10K tools... And you're stepping on each others' toes. This was a hacky solution to that, but I'm sympathetic to the problem.
You don't have to be in review to edit. There are inconsistencies in terms of the effect this has (it'll resolve VLQ flags but not NAA or close flags for instance), but the hardest part is finding someone willing to make "salvage edits" at all. If this is something folks are interested in doing more of, an explicit "save this awful post" tool would be ideal.
Leave open. This one is a bit dodgy. I've resisted in the past efforts to make "leave open" a first-class means of interacting with a question, as in that context it becomes just a way to remove others' ability to review a specific post. I may be wrong on this; still, giving this ability to folks who know the secret route without making it available to everyone is definitely unfair.
I don't have a great solution to #1 in mind, I'm afraid. But it would probably involve some substantive improvements to the 10K tools. Some folks have been experimenting with userscripts to make the "late answers" list more useful recently, and I'm interested to hear what they're able to identify when it comes to problems that are being missed in the current /review interface. For their purposes (which is to say, as a temporary work-around to the removal of the review links) I'll note that you can accomplish the same task by checking for the presence of a "very low quality" option in the flagging dialogue on posts scoring <=0 - if it exists, then the post isn't currently in review.
For #2, I'd like to see an option for privileged users to go directly to a "review circumventing" editor. Essentially, they'd be trusted to actually fix a post, and their edit would immediately remove it from review just as editing from within review does. This idea needs some fleshing out, but I think it would go a lot further than a non-obvious option on a hidden route by giving folks with the most experience a chance to salvage questions they have a particular interest in.
Usage #3 I would really prefer wasn't available. Quite honestly, this by itself is good reason not to restore access to pending reviews. You can try and convince me I'm wrong here, but do so by arguing for an option available to everyone - this shouldn't be a secret.