The tag to use when you specifically want to get an answer based on strictly the C++ standard (any version) rather than current implementations is [language-lawyer].
The [c++11] and [c++14] tags make sense if and only if you want an answer that specifically covers these and only these versions of the standard. Without those tags, answerers should already take into account the fact that the current C++ standard is C++14, but may also cover C++11, C++03 and C++98 in their answers.
It makes sense to me to remove the language version tags.
As for the [undefined-behavior] tag, that doesn't seem to me to apply to your question. I would think that that is more relevant for questions that cover a specific result of undefined behaviour, whereas your question is about getting a valid C++ answer, which already implies no undefined behaviour without the need for a tag.