Although I agree with Nicol Bolas's sentiment that answer-comments are in general not good for Stack Overflow, things are not always ideal, and sometimes, a comment is better than the nothing we'd otherwise have.1
But any time you think that a comment's deletion would be so detrimental to the site that it would be "vandalism", that's a sure sign that the information doesn't belong in a comment. It belongs somewhere that can be indexed by search engines, seen by people in queues and search results, updated for future changes, linked to and attributed, etc.
As the SO help says:
Comments are temporary "Post-It" notes left on a question or answer. They can be up-voted (but not down-voted) and flagged, but do not generate reputation. There's no revision history, and when they are deleted they're gone for good.
As MSE says:
You should not expect them to be around forever: Once a clarification has been made, an edit added to the post to include new information, or the issue in the comment is otherwise resolved, it is subject to deletion. In reality, many obsolete or chatty comments remain untouched due to the high volume of comments posted, but this does not mean that they can't or shouldn't be deleted in the future.
Of course you're free to disagree with some of the site's/community's standards, but that doesn't mean you can demand that a moderator be punished for doing their job according to those standards.
1. Examples: I have an idea for a solution, but I'm too busy or too lazy or too out of my area of expertise to turn it into an answer. I've written an answer or found a dup, and I have some additional info that seems unlikely to be of any value to anyone searching on the same problem later, but that may resolve the OP's unique confusion. I'm afraid that maybe this isn't really a question, but the first round of a help vampire's attempt to use Stack Overflow for an iterative debugging session. I don't want to do the OP's homework for them, but I want to give them a hint so they can figure out the answer (and, ideally, come back and write and accept an answer—who doesn't love when that happens?).
the issue in the comment is otherwise resolved, it is subject to deletion
If, for example, an answer would be given based on my comment, then my comment would not be needed anymore, and should be deleted to avoid duplication.