It largely depends on your seniority. If you are a full professor - like me - you have a way better chance to be treated well by the editorial board - because they more likely have heard of you. If you are a junior, then you do not have that luxury. In that case I would try to team up with a senior scientist, and do it together. Failing that, do try on your own. If you succeed with that, then you can also brag that you have a paper done, even at your tender age. :-)
high impact factor journals focus on quality of work. So if your work have novelty, strong methodology, fruitful results and definitely a better language command, then chances of getting published are high.
I think that you should not bother yourself to publish in a high impact journal!
Peter Doherty (winner of Nobel prize) has a very nice idea regarding impact factor:
“Impact factors are skewing science, causing journal editors to select papers based on what is going to be popular. Instead, you should target a journal where people in your field are going to read your work”
Publishing in high impact scientific journals is quite difficult, but there are tips and techniques that can get you there. Learn techniques and strategies to give you the best chance of successfully publishing, tips on developing your papers, and understand the research publishing cycle in highly selective journals.
The so-called High impact of scientific journals is a non-sense concept. This concept is much more for marketing purposes. Moreover, many professors find their manuscripts rejected by ordinary good journals. The journal is good as long as the journal is index by Scopus, Norwegian list, WoS, IBSS, ScieLo. An excellent published article will always be attractive for reading, recommendations, and citations. It does not matter if it is published in so-called high-impact journals.