I handled the automatic flag raised on that post, and in hindsight, I probably should have deleted it at that time.
The post was flagged on the 11th, and the review concluded by the end of the next day and decided that the post should be deleted. As it was highly upvoted, it fell into the moderator queue. The disputed LQPQ mod queue at that time was over 150 flags (I remember this because my quarter end exams had concluded on June 15th evening, and what better way to enjoy some time off, other than blasting through the queue).
I saw this post in the mod queue on the June 16th, and the first thing I realized was that the queue had voted to delete it. Now, the standard way to handle a disputed LQPQ review is to check the answer, read the question, re-read the answer, then take action. My initial thought when I read the answer was similar to yours (that it's a non-answer and a slightly obtuse comment), however, my perspective changed when I read the question. The question was clear, the OP did try to "fool" the compiler by adding a simple cast which failed, and asked the reason for its failure. When I re-read the answer, the answer made complete sense, the compiler won't be fooled and thus the cast didn't work. Therefore I just cleared the flag and moved along.
I probably would have deleted the post, or atleast converted it to a comment if I had seen the entire question and the other answer, which would have given a clear signal to delete the post. I just saw the question and the answer from the queue and followed on with the normal technique. I am now still unsure whether to continue the current technique (which takes approximately 25~35 seconds) or to read the entire post for every flag (which takes more than 90~120 seconds). Thank you for helping me refine my technique, and sorry for the inconvenience caused.
Given that Hans has updated the answer, to make it more valid and answer-like, I think that it would be better to leave it as such. However, if you all (the community) decide that the answer needs to be deleted, feel free to poke me and I'll delete it.