"Double-dipping" the process by flagging and close-voting doesn't have any benefit as far as I know. Both lead to the question being queued up for review, so using either one should suffice. Close-voting is obviously better, as flags (other than "Spam" or "Rude/Abusive") cannot trigger something like automated deletion, as far as I know atleast.
Regarding the flagged questions: I would say that your flags were warranted, and should not have been declined. At most, if the moderator handling your flags felt very strong about it, they should've been disputed, but I can see no reason why one would choose to decline them.
As I've stated in my comment already, I don't think that edits made by the original poster apply. Going by that understanding those questions are simply unsalvageable. We cannot know what the OP is asking for, atleast it question 1 and 3, and thus flagging those questions is warranted in my opinion.
That being said, I think the current flag reasons should be flagged as well. In my opinion most of them are confusing, and really don't do any good. As of now, I'd say that simply flagging a post without giving a reason would be more efficient.
The best option, in my opinion, would be new flag reasons. Clear borders, and clear instructions. Short, clear reasoning, the user quickly checks "Does it fit?", and the moderator quickly checks "Does it fit?", and the process is done.
That'd be much easier than applying those hella obfuscated reasons, especially considering that every single one, no matter if user, moderator or SE employee, seems to have a slightly different interpretation of the flag reasons.
Apparently though that has no priority, as most of the feature requests regarding flags didn't receive any attention (not even status-declined).