The "rude or abusive" flag description says,
A reasonable person would find this content inappropriate for respectful discourse.
It links to the Code of Conduct, which only talks about behaviors against other users.
The answer said,
Body must be at least 30 characters; you entered 11.
There is obviously no rude language nor abuse of another user here.
In fact, this might even be an attempt to answer if the question was, "Why am I getting an error attempting to submit this content to my website?" Maybe the user posted this answer on the wrong question and meant to post it on one like I suggest. Who knows? Now, that would be a poor question and a poor answer indeed, but it clearly doesn't qualify as "rude or abusive."
Declining the flag and then deleting it separately is clearly an appropriate response. It would of course be inappropriate (and likely a mistake) for a mod to decline and then not delete the post, but the post was deleted in this case.
As for what flag you should use, the FAQ you linked suggests Not an Answer is the most appropriate:
The post contains no useful information, such as an answer that says “I don't care about your problem”. Flag as not an answer instead.
And logically, I agree. However, NAA has a long history of being evaluated out of context. It gets declined more frequently than it ought to (or at least has historically).
If NAA fails (which it may), then you'd be better served by raising a custom flag for a post like this. Then you can include an explanation, explicitly telling the moderator that the post makes no sense in context. Apparently, it's discouraged to do this from the get go, but it might also give you a better result with less effort in practice. You may wish to apply your judgement about how obvious it is that the post is Not an Answer.
Since it's human readable and doesn't contain any offensive language, rude/abusive isn't appropriate. Neither is spam since it's not undisclosed promotion.
Lastly, the "consensus" you cite is based on this post by Shog, which has several notable qualities:
- It's talking about pure gibberish. For example, the text "dfajiojaifojadiofjadhigaowkokaomdiovnuiyhioqejgioqejgio". The post you flagged is not this. It is readable English, even if it doesn't make a lot of sense in context.
- Shog is suggesting that any flag is okay for pure gibberish, and he personally prefers the "abusive" reason only because of the side effect of post locking. Once it's in front of a moderator's eyes, locking no longer matters. It follows then that a moderator may decline the flag if they determine that it's an inappropriate type. The important thing is that the gibberish post gets deleted. This is a far cry from the advice that rude/abusive is the correct flag type.
It explicitly excludes "broken English":
Note that this advice does not apply to questions or answers posted in horribly broken English; while those may well be Very Low Quality, in most cases they're still a slight step up from the sort of "cat on a keyboard" nonsense you're referring to.
The post in question isn't even as bad as broken English. It just doesn't answer the question.
Furthermore, the advice was edited into the post you linked in 2015, long, long after the answer was deemed to be consensus by votes, and a long time before the current incarnation of our flagging system. I'm not even convinced it's valid advice anymore. And given that the answer you linked differs significantly in insisting on a particular kind of flag, I'm not sure that it was actually consensus at the time it was edited in.