As explained in a Meta answer, link-only answers should be flagged:
[...] since it requires you to go off-site to find a solution. We want solutions to be on the site. The answer should have been a comment. To be an answer, it should cite the relevant parts of the off-site resource instead.
Also according to Meta, an answer which is a link-only answer should not be flagged as:
in need of moderator intervention
A problem not listed above that requires action by a moderator. Be specific and detailed!
because it is “taking time from mods”. This is understandable. Instead, one should chose:
not an answer
This was posted as an answer, but it does not attempt to answer the question. It should possibly be an edit, a comment, another question, or deleted altogether.
However, this is unclear by simply looking at flag reasons descriptions. There are two problems here:
“in need of moderator intervention” looks exactly as any other reason. Previously, I thought that all four reasons have equal severity and lead to the same procedure, meaning that I would chose the fourth one as a default choice, and so much more frequently than I should have.
The description of “not an answer” excludes link-only answers, because it deals explicitly with the answers which “[do] not attempt to answer the question”: link-only answers do attempt to answer the question, and often answer it; the problem is not that they don't answer the question, but that Stack Exchange community wants the answer to be located on Stack Exchange sites, not on a third-party site.
The rejection of the flag has a weird explanation: “declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer”. This doesn't inform the users properly about what they did wrong, and actually claims that link-only answers shouldn't be flagged at all, which is wrong.
Given the current descriptions, flagging a link-only answer as “in need of moderator intervention” is the intuitive response.
My suggestions are:
To highlight the fourth reason or to indicate in some other way that the first three are dealt with by the community, while the fourth one requires moderators attention and should be used with caution.
To change the description of “not an answer” to include link-only answers as well.
To change the decline explanation to “declined - link-only answers should be flagged as not an answer in order to be dealt directly by community; flagging a question to moderators should be done only in a case of a serious issue with the answer.”
Does it make sense?