Let's not.
- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied?
Yes. It tells you very clearly that the question is going to be about manipulating substrings.
1b. Is it unambiguous?
Well, no. But this is a stupid criterion. I've made this argument before, and a bunch of Meta regulars profoundly disagree with me, so I'll try to avoid belaboring it. But consider that the vast majority of tags—nay concepts in the world—are ambiguous. Do you think we should have a string or char tag? What about a localization tag? vector? assembly? file-io? All of these tags are equally as ambiguous as substring. Strict adherence to this "rule" would require that we burninate all of them. I argue that we should instead use common sense and follow a better rule, something along the lines of, "Is this tag useful for categorizing questions?"
- Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Yes? Yes. Agreed.
- Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Debatable, for the same reasons as #1b. You offer no explanation in your proposal as to why the fact that the question is about manipulating substrings is not "meaningful".
- Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Depends on how deep you go down the rat hole. You have fallen into said hole. Yes, every language and/or library probably has a different way of working with substrings, and even strings in general. That doesn't make those tags useless, it just explains why, in most cases, you will also want to include a language/library tag on your question.
To pre-empt all of the "but if it can't be used alone, that means it's a meta tag" comments: no, I didn't say it can't be used alone. If you're asking a general, algorithm-style question about substrings, then you can certainly use the substring tag alone. However, if you want an answer that takes into account specific usage patterns in a particular language or library, you should use that tag.
That's not to say that this is a perfect tag, but I don't think the argument is anywhere near strong enough for its burnination.
However, I do strongly support merging substrings into substring and creating a synonym.