It serves the purpose of assuming good faith / good will of the poster.

When the answer is deleted, the poster can read canned comments from reviewers (this doesn't really answer the question, blah, blah). If the poster edits the answer to add flesh to it, removes noise, converts the link-only/NAA post to a real answer (without just copying the link contents, that is), then undeletes it, then there's nothing more to do, and maybe it's the beginning of a good answer (a flagged answer with a good edit that I'm going to let live: https://stackoverflow.com/posts/67299646/revisions).

On the other hand, if the poster undeletes the answer without editing, or with a non-significant edit, this is a problem. Because some users will have to review again, maybe vote to delete, and OP can undelete again without any effort.

That's why the system provides an automatic flag for moderators: _disputed low quality review_ (reserved for answers only).

_(There are currently 18 disputed low quality review flags in the queue. Much faster to handle than the usual hundreds of custom flags)._

Moderators review those flags from time to time. If the post is still link-only or still not an answer then the moderator handling the flag can delete it again. When a post is deleted by a moderator, it can only be undeleted by a moderator (some newcomers undelete their non-answers because they're desperate for help, even if it blatantly violates our rules... that's a lost battle).

If the post has been edited and shows improvement, the moderator will just mark the auto flag as helpful, maybe help with formatting and minor stuff, possibly upvote as a bonus, and that's it.

So now, if OP wants to undelete the post, they have to really improve it and custom flag it for undeletion. Gosh, more flags...

_The system works!_