We already effectively have this (minus the listing of tags). When we drill down to the "not an answer" flags, this is what we see first:
This allows us to process obvious non-answers quickly. We only see a limited version of the answer, and the title of the question it's on, but if we can tell from that that something isn't an answer, we can quickly delete these in a rapid-fire action.
For me, that's the first step in a triage of these: delete all the obvious ones right from this page. That's fast, and can take care of many of these.
If we don't have the full text displayed, we can click on the disclosure arrows to display the remainder of the answer and the first few lines of the question. Again, if that's enough to tell that answer isn't an answer, we can delete with a click of a button.
From this list here, I can tell that #2 is a link-only answer to a jsfiddle (delete), and #5 is a complaint about answers and not an answer itself (delete). #1 is almost certainly a follow-on question, but I'll disclose the rest to make sure (and probably delete). #3 is possibly an answer, and #4 is probably not, but disclosing those will probably reveal all that I need to judge them.
That then leaves the few remaining flags that don't make sense to us, even in the context of the entire answer. That's where we have to make a judgment call, and where pretty much all the flags that people complain about will fall. How these are handled will vary from moderator to moderator, and even on a case-by-case basis.
Some are obviously attempts to mark a competing or well-written answer as being wrong, and we can decline those without further review. For others, I'll pull up the question and try to figure out what someone was seeing. The flag has no context, so we often don't see what someone else did.
The arguments you see on Meta mostly arise because we either didn't see what the flagger did, or because we philosophically disagreed with how the flag was being used. These are things that most likely won't be addressed with any kind of UI refinement, and if we had the full question onscreen for each of these items it would significantly slow down the processing of the majority of these flags.