I don't really agree with you about the "intended use of comments".
The help page about comment privilege reports the valid reasons for which we can comment to posts, with two of those three that are valid for these posts, in my opinion:
As long as we don't just abruptly accuse the author, and we instead kindly ask them (point 1) if they didn't just use AI to write a whole answer, we can also link them the AI policy, warning them about the reasons behind that policy and the possible consequences of ignoring it, eventually by pointing out why we believe that what expressed in their post is wrong, no matter how it was created.
This could lead to a user admitting their fault and actually improve their answer (I've never seen this, but I'm optimist that it may have happened), or, eventually, the post deletion on their part.
To me, any one of these alternatives is an improvement, both to the answer and to the whole post: in case of removal, nobody will see an invalid answer and attempt to use its contents.
Also, while I can understand the point about triggering downvotes, I wouldn't care too much about it:
deleted answers revert the reputation based on its votes;
based on my experience, most of these cases are about users who are new or have very low rep (if none at all), so the possible multiple downvotes would have little drawbacks but acceptable benefits, since they will also trigger more and more pressing notifications that would possibly get the OP attention sooner than later, possibly leading to a useful action on their part;
multiple downvotes to a post or a user may get more attention to mods, or at least make their evaluation an easier or more considerate task (even if that may be a possible cause for a bias, but that's up to the mod capabilities and experience);
About the second point, I've seen some occurrences of these answers from users being on the platform for some time and having a limited or acceptable reputation (from 100-200 and up to a couple of thousands).
They probably are casual SO users that come here from time to time, and are not used to standard SO conducts or newer policies; they probably got a lot of rep just from a couple of good questions or answers, and they assume that such rep would make them experienced enough (we all know that there are users with high reputation only because they wrote the right question/answer at the right time). Then, they think that they could "help" without carefully considering their actions, or just want improve their rep for some reason: maybe they're bored and believed that they could easily "level-up", or they suddenly thought about their low rep and realized that they could do something about it with AI, possibly hoping that, by doing it, a new question of theirs could get more attention (you never know when you need it).
I tend to do more down than up votes, but I always consider DV implications along with user history, the given answer (and how much it can be "wrong") and their overall rep, including how they got it.
If the reputation is already at 1 and they don't have other (and recent) downvoted answers that would lead to it, I downvote, because an invalid answer is still worth a downvote (which is an important aspect for readers), and that wouldn't affect the honest attempt of a new user to get more rep, even if misplaced. And I also do it for higher reps (generally, above 100-200), because it doesn't affect that value so much.
In any case, if I do it, it's based on proper experience and by carefully checking with existing LLM.
Finally, while I could just follow the post, a kind comment warning about all this has a dual benefit: it warns the OP about the issue of their action before possible action is taken, and also triggers a notification if the user properly comments back, so I can eventually retract my vote. And, as said, if the post is deleted, the reputation is restored, so there is no harm done anyway.
Still, the flag is mandatory anyway.