How to prevent this kind of behavior? What to to? Please dont tell "suggest to reopen" or "gain 1000 upvotes on the tag so you can reopen".
Um, why not? That's the standard solution when close votes get misused: you vote to reopen the question. Whether it took 1 vote or 5, the remedy is always the same. 5 reopen votes can undo a single dupehammer vote.
I think it is a serious problem - it degrades the entire credibility of stackoverflow and its users.
I find this to be hyperbole. Even if we accept that this behavior is a problem, that hardly rises it to the level of destroying the site's credibility.
In this case, the user in question did not answer the question and immediately go around to dupe-hammer every possible question as a duplicate of that one. It was over a year before they hammered the older question.
Closing one of the questions as a duplicate of the other is the correct move. Which one gets closed is not nearly as important as having one of them closed. That's not to say that the OP made the right decision. But I don't get the sense that the decision to close-vote was the craven, self-serving choice you make it out to be. It seems much more likely the user ran into the old question, remembered that they had answered it before, and closed it as a duplicate of their question.
Especially since, by that point, the OP had gotten most of the rep they're going to get from that answer. So this doesn't really look like gaming the system or something.
The other thing you forget is that the initial failure in the system was that a duplicate question was asked and it took over a year before someone noticed. Both questions were heavily viewed, so it's not like nobody saw either of them.
Solving that problem is far more likely to pay off in the long run than the one you cite here.
A big problem with providing any kind of restriction on dupe-hammering for questions that have that person's answers on them is that it reduces the utility of writing canonical questions.
A canonical question is a semi-broad question that exists primarily to be the destination of a lot of dupe votes. Such questions are usually explicitly written for this purpose, so they tend to be worded in a very general way.
Allow me to provide an example: Rendering meshes with multiple indices
See, the multiple index rendering question comes up in a lot of specific ways. There are several popular mesh file formats that use multiple indices. Rendering cubes (an unfortunately popular past-time for newbies thanks to Minecraft) is another common circumstance. And there are others.
This question skips all of those specifics and focuses on the need for indexing different vertex attributes with different indices. That's the point of it: you're taking a user's overly specific problem and boiling it down to the core of it, then explaining how to deal with it.
You might also notice that I wrote that question. I did not write that question because I needed the answer (as evidenced by the fact that I wrote that too;) ). I did not write that question/answer just because I wanted to have that said somewhere; I could easily have written that answer on one of the dozens of such duplicates.
No, I wrote that question/answer for the expressed purpose of creating a dupe-target, of having a single, centralized, canonical question/answer to all of the myriad of forms of this question.
If you had told me then that, while I would be allowed to write such a canonical question, I would not be allowed to actually use it for its intended purpose, that I would be prevented from voting to dupe-hammering to it, then I probably wouldn't have written it. I'd have just picked some other, more specific version of the question to use as a dupe target.
And the site would be worse off for it.
You're basically saying that a person who frequents a tag often enough to know what questions get asked frequently, and then takes the time to write a canonical question/answer for it, will not have the power to dupe-hammer duplicates of that canonical question. This is particularly important on tags with relatively low user participation, where it's already hard to get questions closed as duplicates in reasonable time.